Black Pro Se
Authorship and the Limits of Law in Nineteenth-Century African American Literature
By Faith Barter
![Black Pro Se](https://uncpress-us.imgix.net/covers/9781469685977.jpg?auto=format&w=300)
236 pp., 6.125 x 9.25
-
Paperback ISBN: 978-1-4696-8597-7
Published: March 2025 -
Hardcover ISBN: 978-1-4696-8596-0
Published: March 2025
Paperback Available March 2025, but pre-order your copy today!
Buy this Book
For Professors:
Free E-Exam Copies
Barter juxtaposes nineteenth-century law and literature to show how Black writers counterintuitively used legal forms to reimagine their own relationships to time and place. Organized around four legal forms—appeal, confession, jurisdiction, and precedent—this book demonstrates how Black writers creatively used them to challenge the logics of their oppression. Reading Black writers not merely as witnesses or victims but as visionaries for what the legal system could be, this book excavates the importance of legal thinking in the African American literary tradition.
About the Author
Faith Barter is assistant professor of English at the University of Oregon.
For more information about Faith Barter, visit
the
Author
Page.
Reviews
"Faith Barter remakes African American literary studies as a genealogy, and she is truly doing something spectacular for law and literary connections in nineteenth-century studies. [The book] belongs alongside other important texts in nineteenth-century history and literature. Original and necessary."—Samantha Pinto, University of Texas at Austin
"Black Pro Se is a compelling, creative, and original work of scholarship. Faith Barter has written a model of how to theorize law and literature in a way that does justice to both—a work that will be generative for scholars in law, literature, history, and their intersections for many years to come."—Jonathan Beecher Field, Clemson University