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Latest comment: 15 years ago5 comments3 people in discussion
This article has been nominated for deletion. Two users have made very constructive suggestions about how to turn this into a good article. I am posting them here and hope that these users will elaborate:
Keep Standard terminology in the field. Besides the article cited in J.Modern Literature, the first 7 ghits yield two more good ones, one from Modern Language Review, another from [Washignton City Paper], It was introduced by the extremely important writer Zora Neale Hurston and consequently will be found in all discussions of her work or based on her writings. The nom and the first pile-on deletes must have never even thought to check Google. Whether it is used colloquially at the present time is irrelevant. DGG (talk) 23:34, 25 November 2008 (UTC)Reply
This subject is, literally, encyclopaedic, in that it gets a two page entry in the Encyclopedia of the Harlem Renaissance (Cary D. Wintz, Paul Finkelman; Taylor & Francis, 2004. 906–907. ISBN9781579584580). It's also discussed in The Cambridge Companion to the Harlem Renaissance and in the "From House Niggers to Niggerati" chapter of Asim's The N Word. And those are just the top three books that came up on a Google Books search. There are plenty of sources and plenty of scope for expansion to talk about the Niggerati, Niggerati Manor, and various closely related biographical and social issues. This is a stub encyclopaedia article in need of refactoring and expansion. Keep. Uncle G (talk) 12:43, 26 November 2008 (UTC)Reply
I hope DGG and UncleG will offer some more constructive suggestions for how to go about doing the research necessary to build this into a good article; then maybe some of our many volunteer editors will follow through! Slrubenstein | Talk22:30, 27 November 2008 (UTC)Reply
There is serious fear that this page will attract considerable vandalism so I have partically protected it but I hope real editors will use this page to do some real work! Slrubenstein | Talk22:32, 27 November 2008 (UTC)Reply
Latest comment: 15 years ago2 comments2 people in discussion
Can this talk page be unprotected now so that unregistered users can make comments? We can quickly restore protection if necessary. --TS19:48, 4 September 2009 (UTC)Reply