F20 Black Atlantic: Resources, Pedagogy, and Scholarship on the 18th Century Black Atlantic

Kierra M. Porter

Kierra M. Porter is a first-year English doctoral student at Howard University. She received her bachelor's degree from the University of Houston and her master of arts degree from Texas Southern University.  At Texas Southern University, she published a thesis on black womanhood, authenticity, and self-care. She hopes to continue research on African American women in literature.

This page has paths:

  1. Author Index Emily MN Kugler

Contents of this path:

  1. Whose Voice Matters? : The Exclusion of Indigenous People in the Digital Cannon
  2. A Foucaldian Perspective on Capitalism, Power, and Slavery
  3. Black Women in Slave Narratives---A Lesson Plan
  4. Colonial Louisiana, White Heteropatriarchal Spaces, & Fashion as Material Culture ---A Project Proposal
  5. Religion and Slave Narratives----A Lesson Plan
  6. Black Archives and Archivist Matter!
  7. Black Voices Lost in Translation
  8. Performance Theory, Christian Imperialism, and The Female American ----A Lesson Plan
  9. Research Project Proposal: A Timeline of the Depiction of Louisiana Creole Women in Literature and the Events That Follow
  10. Rape, Questions of Agency, and Black Womanhood
  11. Reimagining The History of Mary Prince, A West Indian Slave, and A Woman of Color—A Tale texts through an Interactive Map Tool.
  12. Draft and Action Plan
  13. Link to my Final Project: Depiction of Louisiana Creole Women in Nineteenth-Century American Literature