Document Type

Published Article

Source

J19: The Journal of Nineteenth-Century Americanists

Publication Date

Fall 2025

Volume

13

Issue

2

Page Range

349-365

Abstract

This article argues that Frances E. W. Harper’s poetics generate a broad understanding of disability, one that accounts for entanglements of race and structural debilitation. Drawing on Black disability studies, a field that examines intertwining oppressions of ableism and racism, the article shows how Harper’s poetry challenges expectations that Black people perform strength and resilience while they survive debilitating oppressive systems. Her work resists the reductive association of Blackness with deficiency while refusing to ignore the material effects of racial capitalism, which has long extracted from Black bodies while denying them care and rest. Centering pain and fatigue not only as symbols for oppression but also as material realities shaped by slavery and systemic violence, Harper’s poetics reveal disability to be a site of resistance and furthermore assert that interdependent care is crucial for futures of liberation and justice.

Publisher Statement

Copyright © 2025 Hopkins Press. This material first appeared in J19: The Journal of Nineteenth-Century Americanists. Vivian Delchamps Wolf. pp. 349-365. Reprinted with permission by Johns Hopkins University Press.

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