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Alice Dunbar- Nelson as Author Posing theoretical questions about authors and authorship has long been a vexed proposition in criticism on African American writers.
The legal case between Alice Dunbar-Nelson and William Kemp offers a clear record of how women of color fought back against race-based police violence generations before the protests of the 1960s and the modern Black Lives Matter movement.
Although Alice Dunbar-Nelson had public marriages to Paul Laurence Dunbar, Henry Arthur Callis, and Robert J. Nelson, she also cultivated secret romantic relationships with women.
On September 18, 1935, Alice Dunbar-Nelson passed away from heart related problems in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. After a life full of passion and progression, her relatives sought to preserve her legacy, and in 1984, her diary was published, detailing the many facets of Dunbar-Nelson’s life.
The Alice Dunbar-Nelson Papers consist of the literary, professional, and personal papers of Alice Dunbar-Nelson. The papers include an extensive collection of her incoming correspondence. Of particular note is her correspondence (1895-1904) with Paul Laurence Dunbar, which also includes her letters to Dunbar.
Dunbar-Nelson maintained a daily diary for most of her adult life and the extent portions of her diaries are present in her papers. The Alice Dunbar-Nelson papers also include significant collections of family papers, scrapbooks, newspaper clippings, ephemera, and memorabilia.
The political, professional, generic, and geographical diversity that characterizes Alice Dunbar-Nelson’s life and work can make it difficult to develop a comprehensive sense of her as a writer. Fortunately, several excellent scholarly overviews are available.