成人直播 professor delivers article on legacy of early 20th-century Black author
Jennifer Tuttle, Ph.D., Dorothy M. Healy Professor of Literature and Health in the 成人直播 School of Arts and Humanities and 2021-2022 Ludcke Chair of Liberal Arts and Sciences, has published a journal article based on her recent sabbatical research.
The publication, titled 鈥,鈥 is an analytical profile of an author who is almost entirely unknown but whose life story and diverse creative output shed substantial light on Black women鈥檚 writing in early twentieth-century Los Angeles.
The profile, which introduces Mitchell to the world, is accompanied by a reprint, edited by Tuttle, of Mitchell鈥檚 courtroom murder mystery, 鈥,鈥 which appeared serially in LA鈥檚 premiere Black newspaper, the California Eagle, in the summer of 1923; this month鈥檚 re-publication thus celebrates the story鈥檚 centenary. This work appears in Legacy: A Journal of American Women Writers, but both the profile and the reprint are being offered free without a subscription by the University of Nebraska Press at the above links.
Mitchell and her ancestors are nearly invisible in the historical record, and most traces of her life, along with a portion of her work, have crumbled into dust. Yet, Tuttle argues that 鈥渢heir lives mattered: the experiences of Mitchell and her family are an important part of American history, Black history, women鈥檚 history, and the history of the US West.鈥
Moreover, Tuttle explains that recovering Mitchell鈥檚 creative work (which appeared in silent films, newspaper inserts, pulp magazines, and local theater 鈥 all ephemeral venues) 鈥渉elps substantially to expand researchers鈥 expectations about what constitutes Black women writers鈥 historical archive.鈥
That is, Tuttle said, 鈥渋t prods us to rethink where to look, and what to look for, when seeking out Black women鈥檚 lives and work in the West before 1930.鈥
Tuttle spoke about the research process for this project in her earlier this year.