Jun 22, 2005 (News & Notes ) — New Hampshire indentured servant turned novelist Harriet Wilson wrote Our Nig more than a century ago. The work is the first known publication by an African American woman. Now Wilson will become the first person of color in New Hampshire history to have a monument in her likeness.
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Detail from the Penguin USA revision of 'Our Nig' ()
N.H. to Honor First African-American Novelist
by Shannon Mullen
Jun 22, 2005 (News & Notes ) — New Hampshire indentured servant turned novelist Harriet Wilson wrote Our Nig more than a century ago. The work is the first known publication by an African American woman. Now Wilson will become the first person of color in New Hampshire history to have a monument in her likeness.New Hampshire indentured servant-turned-novelist Harriet Wilson wrote Our Nig: or, Sketches from the Life of a Free Black more than a century ago.
The work is the first known publication by an African American. Wilson will become the first person of color in New Hampshire history to have a monument in her likeness.
The book was first published in 1859 and was re-discovered and published again in the 1980s. Wilson is now considered the mother of the African-American novelist tradition.
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