Charles Chesnutt: Crossing the Color Line
By (Author) Paula Gallant Eckard
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
19th March 2026
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Social and cultural history
History of the Americas
Hardback
320
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
Charles Waddell Chesnutt was an African American educator, businessman, lawyer, author, social reformer, and activist. He was one of the first African American writers to cross the color line into the Anglo American publishing world. A pioneering author of African American fiction, Chesnutt is perhaps best known for his exploration of sensitive issues of race, including slavery, prejudice, racism, and racial violence, in his short stories and novels.
This book explores Chesnutts remarkable life and legacy, including his contributions as an author, activist, and social commentator. The author examines the ways he chronicled, challenged, and crossed the color line, beginning in his early life. She illuminates the people, places, events, and ideas that shaped his complex view of race and society and shows how themes such as education, opportunity, and fairness informed his efforts.
To tell his remarkable story, Eckard draws on Chesnutts journals, letters, essays, speeches, as well as his short fiction and novels. Lastly, Charles Chesnutt: Crossing the Color Line strives to interpret his work in light of todays events and the continued struggle for racial and social justice.
Paula Gallant Eckard is professor of English and director of American Studies at the University of North Carolina, Charlotte. A noted expert on the Southern literary tradition, she is the author of Maternal Body and Voice in Toni Morrison, Bobbie Ann Mason, and Lee Smith (University of Missouri Press, 2002) and Thomas Wolfe and Lost Children in Southern Literature (University of Tennessee Press, 2016).