In my last analysis paper, I chose the novel 'Our newcomer ...' or 'Sketch of the life of a free black man, the north two storied white house'. The first thing to argue is whether the book should be classified as a novel or autobiographical story. At first I was reading a novel but after reading the short history of Harriet Wilson I read the book she wanted. Finally, I came to the conclusion that Wilson painted a novel from her own life experience about the story of a young Mulato girl named Frodo.
Wilson, Harriet E. Adams Wilson (around 1828 - 1870) The novelist rediscovered our Nig in 1983 and reissued; or a sketch of a free black life from the northern two-storey White House . It shows that the shadow of slavery also falls there. Through "Our Newcomer" (1859), Harriet E. Adams Wilson became the first African-American woman to publish a British novel. Wilson's autobiographical novel combines elements of the slave narrative and elements of popular emotional novels of the 19th century to Henry Lewis Gates (Jr.), a famous literary and cultural theorist, It is thought that it is. He is one of the first major innovators. The shape of a fictitious story. "There is little detail about the tragic life of Harriet E. Adams Wilson before 1850 and most knowledge comes from the information in her novels as confirmed in the public record.She is I was born in New Hampshire in 1828. Just before my son was born,
Harriet Wilson was the first African-American who published a novel in the USA - our black people: or sketch of a free black life in the north of the two-story White House. There is even a shadow of slavery (1859). The novel realistically dramatizes the marriage between white women and black men and draws the harsh lives of the black servants in a wealthy Christian family. It was previously thought to be autobiography and now it is understood as a fictional work. Like Jacobs, Wilson did not publish her own name (our black is ironic), and her work has been neglected most recently. The same can be said for the works of most female writers. A famous African-American scholar, Henry Luis Gates (Jr.), played a role as leader of the black novel project and re-announced the rookie in 1983