Julia Ringwood Coston
Lucille Green Randolph
Charlotte 'Lottie' Wilson
Eliza Ann Miller
Dr. Mary Fitzbutler Waring
Sadie Chandler Cole
Janie Porter Barrett
Jill of All Trades
Geraldine Pindell Trotter
Bridie Freeman
Fannie Barrier Williams
Lydia Flood Jackson
Minnie D. Woodard-Smith
Dr. Easterling
Lizelia Augusta Jenkins Moorer
Fannie Emanuel
Elise Forrest Harleston
Charlotte Louise Forten Grimké
Mary Beatrice Davidson Kenner
Harriet Gibbs Marshall
William Henry Hunt and Ida Alexander Gibbs
Dr. Catharine Deaver Lealtad
Caroline Still Anderson
Chesta Dillard Dean
Marjorie Ellen Elliott
Bessie Couture
Sybil Harber
Drusilla Dunjee Houston
Haydee E Campbell
Viola Desmond
Ada Lois Sipuel Fisher
Dr. Emma Reynolds
Christia Adair
Clara T Keaton
Katherine 'Kittie' Knox
Arlene Roberts Morris
Lulu Merle Johnson
Mathilda Beasley
Ethel Worthington
Margaret Walker Alexander
Irene Morgan Kirkaldy
Lilian Lewis
Elsie P Austin
Mildred Hemmons Carter
Rosa Dixon-Bowser
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
46 visits
Zara Wright


Recovering The Legacy of Zara Wright
by Rynetta Davis
The December 25, 1920, Chicago Defender features a "New Book on Market" review that praises Chicago based writer Zara Wright's Black and White Tangled Threads, labeling it "a most remarkable book," noting that "to read this story will be convincing proof that as a writer Mrs. Wright is unexcelled." This review was not the only glowing endorsement of Wright's literary debut. Positive reviews marketing Wright's novel continued to appear in the Chicago Defender throughout the 1920s.
Wright's melodramatic, romantic novel Black and White Tangled Threads and its sequel, Kenneth, explore the complex themes of race consciousness, passing, and interracial marriage. Set in the upper-class social worlds of the United States, mostly Louisiana, Kentucky, England, and Italy, the novels follow two families from the generation after emancipation.
A December 3, 1921 review titled "Gift Book Supreme" acknowledges that Black and White Tangled Threads had been "endorsed by press, pulpit and public," and that the book's author tells a "story that will stand as a monument of greatness in the future years." Similarly, an advertisement in the December 10, 1921, Chicago Defender boasts that the novel is "Unquestionably the best book ever written by one of our own authors ... No home should be without this wonderful book." Moreover, Black and White Tangled Threads appears on a "Survey of Negro Life in Chicago: Books You Should Know and Read" list that promotes the most important books by Negro and white authors. Wright's name appears alongside prominent black writers such as Phillis Wheatly, Sojouner Truth, Paul Laurence Dunbar, W.E.B. Du Bois, Jessie Fauset, and Angelina Weld Grimke.
Wright's novels have languished in obscurity and her literary legacy remains obscured despite positive reviews her novel received upon publication. Although much acclaim appeared in the black press, primarily the Chicago Defender, Zara Wright's name is excluded from contemporary discussions of African American literature and black Chicago based writers.
An obituary dated November 1, 1930, published in the Chicago Defender under the heading, "Mrs. Zara Wright, Author of Black and White Tangled Threads,' Dies," reveals that she was born in Cincinnati, Ohio in 1865, that she moved to Chicago approximately in 1895, that she died on October 22, 1930, and that she was "active in civic and welfare movements" until a few years prior to her death. That obituary acknowledges that "Mrs. Wright was an outstanding personality in her community. And while she devoted some time to her public service work after the demise of Mr. Wright most of her time was taken up by writing."
Sources: The Cambridge History of American Women's Literature, edited by Dale M. Bauer, NYPL Digital Collections/Souvenir of Negro Progress: Chicago, 1779-1925
by Rynetta Davis
The December 25, 1920, Chicago Defender features a "New Book on Market" review that praises Chicago based writer Zara Wright's Black and White Tangled Threads, labeling it "a most remarkable book," noting that "to read this story will be convincing proof that as a writer Mrs. Wright is unexcelled." This review was not the only glowing endorsement of Wright's literary debut. Positive reviews marketing Wright's novel continued to appear in the Chicago Defender throughout the 1920s.
Wright's melodramatic, romantic novel Black and White Tangled Threads and its sequel, Kenneth, explore the complex themes of race consciousness, passing, and interracial marriage. Set in the upper-class social worlds of the United States, mostly Louisiana, Kentucky, England, and Italy, the novels follow two families from the generation after emancipation.
A December 3, 1921 review titled "Gift Book Supreme" acknowledges that Black and White Tangled Threads had been "endorsed by press, pulpit and public," and that the book's author tells a "story that will stand as a monument of greatness in the future years." Similarly, an advertisement in the December 10, 1921, Chicago Defender boasts that the novel is "Unquestionably the best book ever written by one of our own authors ... No home should be without this wonderful book." Moreover, Black and White Tangled Threads appears on a "Survey of Negro Life in Chicago: Books You Should Know and Read" list that promotes the most important books by Negro and white authors. Wright's name appears alongside prominent black writers such as Phillis Wheatly, Sojouner Truth, Paul Laurence Dunbar, W.E.B. Du Bois, Jessie Fauset, and Angelina Weld Grimke.
Wright's novels have languished in obscurity and her literary legacy remains obscured despite positive reviews her novel received upon publication. Although much acclaim appeared in the black press, primarily the Chicago Defender, Zara Wright's name is excluded from contemporary discussions of African American literature and black Chicago based writers.
An obituary dated November 1, 1930, published in the Chicago Defender under the heading, "Mrs. Zara Wright, Author of Black and White Tangled Threads,' Dies," reveals that she was born in Cincinnati, Ohio in 1865, that she moved to Chicago approximately in 1895, that she died on October 22, 1930, and that she was "active in civic and welfare movements" until a few years prior to her death. That obituary acknowledges that "Mrs. Wright was an outstanding personality in her community. And while she devoted some time to her public service work after the demise of Mr. Wright most of her time was taken up by writing."
Sources: The Cambridge History of American Women's Literature, edited by Dale M. Bauer, NYPL Digital Collections/Souvenir of Negro Progress: Chicago, 1779-1925
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2025
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter