Harriet Jacobs, today perhaps the single most read and studied Black
American woman of the nineteenth century, has not until recently enjoyed
sustained, scholarly analysis. This anthology presents a far-ranging
compendium of literary and cultural scholarship that will take its place
as the primary resource for students and teachers of Incidents in the
Life of a Slave Girl. The contributors include both established Jacobs
scholars and emerging critics; the essays take on a variety of subjects
in Incidents, treating representation, gender, resistance, and
spirituality from differing angles.