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  1. Alice Dunbar Nelson (July 19, 1875September 18, 1935) was an American poet, journalist, and political activist. Among the first generation of African Americans born free in the Southern United States after the end of the American Civil War , she was one of the prominent African Americans involved in the artistic flourishing of the Harlem ...

  2. Nelson began to keep a personal diary in 1921. Her entries from 1926 to 1931 were later edited by scholar Gloria T. Hull for a volume entitled Give Us Each Day: The Diary of Alice Dunbar-Nelson (W. W. Norton, 1984).

  3. Sep 14, 2024 · Alice Dunbar Nelson was a novelist, poet, essayist, and critic associated with the early period of the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s and ’30s. The daughter of a Creole seaman and a black seamstress, Moore grew up in New Orleans, where she completed a two-year teacher-training program at Straight.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Feb 21, 2020 · Her queer relationships became public when her diary was published in a 1985 book titled, Give us Each Day: The Diary of Alice Dunbar-Nelson, edited by Gloria T. Hull. Dunbar-Nelson’s personal papers were preserved and cared for by her niece, Pauline Young, who, in 1991, donated many of them to the University of Delaware Special Collections ...

  5. Because she worked in a dizzying array of forms— poetry, short fiction, novellas, essays, newspaper columns, editori-als, literary and theater reviews, play and film scripts, diaries, literary analysis, and more— and published in the most influential black periodicals and anthol-ogies of her era.

  6. The diary that Dunbar-Nelson kept in 1921 and between 1925 and 1931 is, according to Hull, ‘Dunbar-Nelson’s most singular contribution to the field of black women’s literature’: ‘Discovered in her papers and published in 1984, it is one of only two existing full-length diaries written by a nineteenth-century African American woman ...

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  8. Dunbar-Nelson kept a diary for much of her adult life. Surviving today are entries dated from 1906, 1921 and 1922, and 19261931. This entry from July 11, 1931, illustrates how dire Dunbar-Nelson’s financial situation had become toward the end of her life.

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