African Americans -- Folklore
Label
African Americans -- Folklore
Name
African Americans
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Incoming Resources
- Subject of22
- Folklore, memoirs, and other writings, Zora Neale Hurston; [edited by Cheryl A. Wall]
- Every tongue got to confess, Negro folk-tales from the Gulf states, Zora Neale Hurston ; foreword by John Edgar Wideman ; edited and with an introduction by Carla Kaplan
- African American folktales, stories from Black traditions in the New World, selected and edited by Roger D. Abrahams
- John Henry
- Every tongue got to confess, [Negro folk-tales from the Gulf states], by Zora Neale Hurston
- The people could fly, the picture book, Virginia Hamilton ; illustrated by Leo and Diane Dillon
- Tops and bottoms, adapted and illustrated by Janet Stevens
- Rikki-Tikki-Tavi, and other classic tales
- John Henry, Roark Bradford's novel and play, introduction and scholarly materials by Steven C. Tracy
- Chicka chicka boom boom, -- and more fun with letters and numbers!, Weston Woods Studios
- African-American folktales for young readers, including favorite stories from African and African-American storytellers, collected and edited by Richard Alan Young and Judy Dockrey Young
- John Henry
- John Henry, adapted by Stephen Krensky ; illustrations by Mark Oldroyd
- From my people, 400 years of African American folklore, edited by Daryl Cumber Dance
- John Henry, hammerin' hero
- John Henry, a retelling by Christianne Jones ; illustrated by Ben Peterson
- Myths, legends, and folktales of America, by David Leeming and Jake Page
- The people could fly, an African-American folktale
- Wiley and the Hairy Man
- Every tongue got to confess, Zora Neale Hurston
- Every tongue got to confess, Zora Neale Hurston
- The tree named John
Outgoing Resources
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