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Some questions
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From: Eleanora E. Tate <eetate>
Date: Fri, 29 Oct 1999 16:48:26 -0400
At 02:26 PM 10/29/1999 EDT, AlwaysErin at aol.com wrote: Writers taking on anything outside of their own culture, even obliquely, must brace themselves for bitter criticism--and there's always something to be criticized.>
Eric, This can happen to African American authors as well. Jacqueline Woodson writes about this most eloquently in an article published last spring (I believe in the Horn Book). Eleanora E. Tate Eleanora E. Tate, Author Po Box 3581 Morehead City, North Carolina 28557
_Don't Split the Pole: Tales of Down-Home Folk Wisdom_ (now in paperback) Visit my web pages at: http://www.aalbc.com/eleanora.htm http://idt.net/~dtate19/elenora.html http://www.randomhouse.com/teachersbdd/tate.html
Received on Fri 29 Oct 1999 03:48:26 PM CDT
Date: Fri, 29 Oct 1999 16:48:26 -0400
At 02:26 PM 10/29/1999 EDT, AlwaysErin at aol.com wrote: Writers taking on anything outside of their own culture, even obliquely, must brace themselves for bitter criticism--and there's always something to be criticized.>
Eric, This can happen to African American authors as well. Jacqueline Woodson writes about this most eloquently in an article published last spring (I believe in the Horn Book). Eleanora E. Tate Eleanora E. Tate, Author Po Box 3581 Morehead City, North Carolina 28557
_Don't Split the Pole: Tales of Down-Home Folk Wisdom_ (now in paperback) Visit my web pages at: http://www.aalbc.com/eleanora.htm http://idt.net/~dtate19/elenora.html http://www.randomhouse.com/teachersbdd/tate.html
Received on Fri 29 Oct 1999 03:48:26 PM CDT