Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Pauline Elizabeth Hopkins: A Brief Chronology
A Note on the Text
Of One Blood; or, The Hidden Self
Appendix A: Pauline Hopkins and the Colored American Magazine
- 1. From “Rise of the Black Republic: Miss Pauline E. Hopkins
Lectures at Tremont Temple,” Boston Post (18 October 1889)
- 2. “Pauline E. Hopkins,” Colored American Magazine (January
1901)
- 3. From Pauline E. Hopkins, Dedication and Preface, Contending
Forces (1900)
- 4. From “Editorial and Publishers’ Announcements,” Colored
American Magazine (May 1900)
- 5. From R.S. Elliott, “The Story of Our Magazine,” Colored
American Magazine (May 1901)
- 6. “Powerful Serial Stories,” from “Announcement for 1902,”
Colored American Magazine (November 1901)
- 7. Cover, Colored American Magazine (March 1903)
- 8. “An Interesting Publication,” Colored American [newspaper]
(4 April 1903)
- 9. Synopsis of Of One Blood, Colored American Magazine
(November 1903)
- 10. Crane and Co. Cosmetics Advertisement, Colored American
Magazine (March 1903)
- 11. From “Editorial and Publishers’ Announcements,” Colored
American Magazine (October 1903)
- 12. From “Editorial and Publishers’ Announcements,” Colored
American Magazine (March 1903)
- 13. From “Editorial and Publisher’s Announcements,” Colored
American Magazine (May–June 1903)
- 14. From Pauline E. Hopkins, “How a New York Newspaper Man
Entertained a Number of Colored Ladies and Gentlemen at Dinner in
the Revere House, Boston, and How the Colored American League Was
Started,” Colored American Magazine (March 1904)
- 15. From Pauline E. Hopkins, Letter to W[illiam] M[onroe]
Trotter (16 April 1905)
- 16. From “Publishers’ Announcements,” Colored American Magazine
(November 1904)
- 17. From “The Colored Magazine in America,” Crisis (November
1912)
Appendix B: Black Feminist Activism
- 1. From Pauline E. Hopkins, “Famous Women of the Negro Race:
IV. Some Literary Workers,” Colored American Magazine (March
1902)
- 2. From Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin, “Address of Josephine St.
P. Ruffin, President of Conference,” Woman’s Era (August 1895)
- 3. From Victoria Earle Matthews, “The Value of Race Literature”
(30 July 1895)
- 4. From Ida B. Wells, Southern Horrors: Lynch Law in All Its
Phases (1892)
- 5. From Anna Julia Cooper, “The Status of Woman in America,” A
Voice from the South (1892)
Appendix C: “Of One Blood”
- 1. From Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)
- 2. Acts of the Apostles 17.22–33
- 3. From Frederick Douglass, The Claims of the Negro,
Ethnologically Considered (1854)
- 4. From Harriet Jacobs, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl,
Written by Herself (1861)
- 5. From W.E.B. Du Bois, “Of Our Spiritual Strivings,” The Souls
of Black Folk (1903)
- 6. From Francis Marion Crawford, Casa Braccio (1894)
- 7. From Pauline E. Hopkins (as J. Shirley Shadrach), “Furnace
Blasts: II. Black or White?—Which Should Be the Young
Afro-American’s Choice in Marriage?,” Colored American Magazine
(March 1903)
Appendix D: Hopkins’s Africa
- 1. From John Milton, Paradise Lost (1667, 1674)
- 2. From John Hartley Coombs, editor, Dr. Livingstone’s 17
Years’ Explorations and Adventures in the Wilds of Africa
(1857)
- 3. From A.F. Jacassy, “African Studies: I. Tripoli of Barbary,”
Scribner’s Magazine (January 1890)
- 4. From Noel Ruthven, “In the Claws,” Frank Leslie’s Popular
Monthly (January 1884)
- 5. From N. Robinson, “The Colossal Statues of Egypt and Asia,”
Frank Leslie’s Popular Monthly (January 1884)
- 6. From G.A. Hoskins, Travels in Ethiopia, Above the Second
Cataract of the Nile (1835)
- 7. From Pauline E. Hopkins, “Famous Women of the Negro Race:
VII. Educators (Continued),” Colored American Magazine (June
1902)
- 8. Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, “Ethiopia” (1854)
- 9. From H. Rider Haggard, She: A History of Adventure
(1887)
- 10. Sarah Morgan Bryan Piatt, “The Black Princess,” Independent
(26 December 1872)
- 11. From W.E.B. Du Bois, “To the Nations of the World” (25 July
1900)
- 12. From Pauline E. Hopkins, A Primer of Facts Pertaining to
the Early Greatness of the African Race and the Possibility of
Restoration by Its Descendants—with Epilogue (1905)
Appendix E: Mesmerism, Spiritualism, and Professional Medicine
- 1. From William James, “The Hidden Self,” Scribner’s Magazine
(March 1890)
- 2. Pauline E. Hopkins, “The Mystery Within Us,” Colored
American Magazine (May 1900)
- 3. From Emma Hardinge [Britten], “The Improvvisatore, or Torn
Leaves from Life History” (1861)
- 4. From “The Haunted Voice,” Frank Leslie’s Popular Monthly
(December 1884)
- 5. From J.P.F. Deleuze, Practical Instruction in Animal
Magnetism (1837)
- 6. From The History and Philosophy of Animal Magnetism, with
Practical Instructions for the Exercise of This Power, by a
Practical Magnetizer (1843)
- 7. “Discovers the Secret of Life: Indiana Physician Asserts It
Is Volatile Magnetism, Which Exists in the Air,” Boston Daily Globe
(29 September 1902)
- 8. From W.E.B. Du Bois, editor, The College-Bred Negro: Report
of a Social Study Made Under the Direction of Atlanta University
(1900)
- 9. Abraham Flexner, “The Medical Education of the Negro,”
Medical Education in the United States and Canada (1910)
Appendix F: Musical Culture
- 1. From Pauline E. Hopkins, “Famous Women of the Negro Race: I.
Phenomenal Vocalists,” Colored American Magazine (November
1901)
- 2. From Theodore Drury, “The Negro in Classic Music; or,
Leading Opera, Oratorio and Concert Singers,” Colored American
Magazine (September 1902)
- 3. Advertisement for Theodore Drury Opera Company’s Aida,
Colored American Magazine (March 1903)
- 4. Poster for Fisk University Jubilee Singers Concert (c.
1885)
- 5. “Go Down, Moses,” from The Story of the Jubilee Singers;
with Their Songs (1876)
- 6. From Frederick Douglass, Narrative of the Life of Frederick
Douglass, an American Slave, Written by Himself (1845)
- 7. From W.E.B. Du Bois, “Of the Sorrow Songs,” The Souls of
Black Folk (1903)
- 8. From James Weldon Johnson, “Preface,” The Book of American
Negro Poetry (1922)
Works Cited and Select Bibliography
About the Author
Eurie Dahn is Professor of English at the
College of Saint Rose. Brian Sweeney is Professor
of English at the College of Saint Rose.
Reviews
“Broadview’s edition of Pauline E. Hopkins’s Of One Blood
identifies and contextualizes Hopkins’s wide-ranging and varied
inspirations, sources, and allusions in a manner that helps readers
trace and understand how she employed her craft to perform
‘historical recovery in the service of racial justice.’ Eurie Dahn
and Brian Sweeney’s brilliant introduction and meticulously
researched notes bring Hopkins’s voice to life and illuminate her
position as one of the foremost African American intellectuals of
the early twentieth century. The breadth and depth of primary
contemporaneous sources that Dahn and Sweeney have assembled raise
the bar for scholarly editions.” — Alisha Knight, Washington
College “Dahn and Sweeney’s edition of Hopkins’s Of One Blood; or,
The Hidden Self strongly grounds the novel in the context of its
publication in the Colored American Magazine and of relevant
contemporaneous texts and ideas. Its wealth of background and
archival material and meticulous elucidation of many of Hopkins’s
textual ‘borrowings’ provide multiple inroads for the study of the
novel and a tremendous resource for students, instructors, and
scholars.” — Julie Fiorelli, Loyola University Chicago