02115nam a2200421 a 4500001001200000003000800012006001900020007001500039008004100054010001700095020003900112020003600151040002100187035002100208043002100229050002700250082002200277100002800299245013200327260005600459300001400515504006400529505035600593533015200949650007401101650007401175650003601249650003401285650004501319650003001364650003601394650002701430651004701457655002901504710001701533856012601550999001701676ebr10340774CaPaEBRm u cr cn|||||||||081021s2009 msu sb s001 0 eng  z 2008045576 z9781604732337 (cloth : alk. paper) z1604732334 (cloth : alk. paper) aCaPaEBRcCaPaEBR a(OCoLC)472608823 an------as------14aPR9205.05b.M33 2009eb04a810.9/89607292221 aM'Baye, Babacar,d1967-14aThe trickster comes westh[electronic resource] :bPan-African influence in early Black diasporan narratives /cBabacar M'Baye. aJackson :bUniversity Press of Mississippi,cc2009. ax, 247 p. aIncludes bibliographical references (p. 219-240) and index.0 aAfrican and Puritan dimensions of Phillis Wheatley's poems and letters -- Pan-Africanism in Quobna Ottobah Cugoano's liberation discourse -- Pan-Africanism in Olaudah Equiano's interesting narrative -- Africanism and Methodism in the works of Elizabeth Hart Thwaites and Anne Hart Gilbert -- African and Caribbean patterns in Mary Prince's resistance. aElectronic reproduction.bPalo Alto, Calif. :cebrary,d2013.nAvailable via World Wide Web.nAccess may be limited to ebrary affiliated libraries. 0aCaribbean literature (English)xBlack authorsxHistory and criticism. 0aAmerican literaturexAfrican American authorsxHistory and criticism. 0aBlacksxRace identityzAmerica. 0aPan-Africanism in literature. 0aSlave narrativesxHistory and criticism. 0aTricksters in literature. 0aAfrican diaspora in literature. 0aSlavery in literature. 0aAmericaxCivilizationxAfrican influences. 7aElectronic books.2local2 aebrary, Inc.40uhttp://site.ebrary.com/lib/rucke/Doc?id=10340774zAn electronic book accessible through the World Wide Web; click to view c46874d46874