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Marita Bonner

Marita Bonner (June 16, 1899 – December 7, 1971), also known as Marieta Bonner, was an American writer, essayist, and playwright who is commonly associated with the Harlem Renaissance. Other names she went by were Marita Occomy, Marita Odette Bonner, Marita Odette Bonner Occomy, Marita Bonner Occomy, and Joseph Maree Andrew. On December 29, 1921, along with 15 other women, she chartered the Iota chapter of Delta Sigma Theta sorority.[1]

Marita Bonner
Born(1899-06-16)June 16, 1899
DiedDecember 6, 1971(1971-12-06) (aged 72)
NationalityAmerican
Other namesMarita Occomy; Marita Odette Bonner; Marita Odette Bonner Occomy; Marita Bonner Occomy; Joseph Maree Andrew
Occupations

Life edit

Marita Bonner was born in Boston, Massachusetts, to Joseph and Anne Noel Bonner. Marita was one of four children and was brought up in a middle-class community in Massachusetts. She attended Brookline High School, where she contributed to the school magazine, The Sagamore. She excelled in German and Music, and was a very talented pianist. In 1917, she graduated from Brookline High School and in 1918 enrolled in Radcliffe College, commuting to campus because many African-American students were denied dormitory accommodation. In college, she majored in English and Comparative Literature, while continuing to study German and musical composition. At Radcliffe, African-American students were not permitted to board, and many either lived in houses off-campus set aside for black students, or commuted, as Bonner did. Bonner was an accomplished student at Radcliffe, founding the Radcliffe chapter of Delta Sigma Theta, a black sorority, and participating in many musical clubs (she twice won the Radcliffe song competition). She was also accepted to a competitive writing class that was open to 16 students, where her professor, Charles Townsend Copeland, encouraged her not to be "bitter" when writing, a descriptor often used for authors of color.[2] In addition to her studies, she taught at a high school in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

After finishing her schooling in 1922,[3] she continued to teach at Bluefield Colored Institute in West Virginia. Two years later, she took on a position at Armstrong High School in Washington, D.C., until 1930, during which time her mother and father both died suddenly. While in Washington, Bonner became closely associated with poet, playwright and composer Georgia Douglas Johnson. Johnson's "S Street salon" was an important meeting place for many of the writers and artists involved in the New Negro Renaissance.

While living in Washington D.C., Bonner met William Almy Occomy. They married and moved to Chicago, where Bonner's writing career took off. After marrying Occomy, she began to write under her married name. After 1941, Bonner gave up publishing her works and devoted her time to her family, including three children.[4] She began teaching again in the 1940s and finally retired in 1963.

Bonner died on December 7, 1971, from smoke-inhalation complications at a hospital after her apartment caught fire.[4] She was 73.

Works edit

Throughout her life, Bonner wrote many short stories, essays and plays, and was a frequent contributor to The Crisis (the magazine of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People) and Opportunity (official publication of the National Urban League) between 1925 and 1940.[5] After her parents' death, she wrote her first essay, "On Being Young–A Woman–And Colored" (December 1925), which highlights the limits put on black Americans, especially black women, in New York (during this time), who lacked "the full-range of New Negro mobility."[6] The speaker in this essay also addresses the residential segregation and social constraints she faced as a woman living in the "Black Ghetto", a community where black Americans were "shoved aside in a bundle because of color."[7] Winner of the inaugural essay contest sponsored by The Crisis[8] (whose literary editor at the time was Jessie Redmon Fauset),[9] this essay encouraged black women not to dwell on their problems but to outsmart negative situations.

Bonner also wrote many short stories between 1925 and 1927, including "The Prison-Bound", "Nothing New", "One Boy's Story" and "Drab Rambles". Her short stories explored a multicultural universe filled with people drawn by the promises of urban life.

She wrote three plays — The Pot Maker (1927), The Purple Flower - A Play (1928) and Exit, an Illusion (1929) — the most famous being The Purple Flower, which portrays black liberation. Many of Bonner's later works, such as Light in Dark Places, dealt with poverty, poor housing, and color discrimination in the black communities, and shows the influence that the urban environment has on black communities. Bonner is one of the many frequently unrecognized black female writers of the Harlem Renaissance who resisted the universalizing, essentialist tendencies by focusing on atypical women rather than on an archetypal man, such as the New Negro," which can be seen in her earliest works.[10] Bonner regularly discussed poverty, familial relations, urban living, colorism, feminism, and racism in her works. She also often wrote about multi-ethnic communities, such as in "Nothing New". Bonner was wholly opposed to generalizations of black experience, and wrote about several differing black experiences in her short stories and plays. She is thus remembered as an advocate for intersectionality and a documentarian of multicultural urban life.[11]

Bonner sometimes wrote under the pseudonym Joseph Maree Andrew, such as when she penned “One Boy’s Story”, a short bildungsroman that details the life of a young black boy living in a white town.[12] Bonner may have adopted this pseudonym as a reaction to the untimely death of her parents, namely her father, Joseph, who financially supported her schooling.[2]

Influences on the Harlem Renaissance edit

Bonner contributed a variety of things to the Harlem Renaissance. Her writings addressed the struggles of people who lived outside of Harlem. Her greatest involvement was her emphasis on claiming a strong racial and gender identity. She argued against sexism and racism and advised other black women to remain silent in order to gain understanding, knowledge, and truth to fight the oppression of race and gender. She also encouraged African Americans to use the weapons of knowledge, teaching, and writing to overcome inequalities. Unlike most Renaissance writers, she focused her writings on issues in and around Chicago. Several of Bonner's short stories addressed the barriers that African-American women faced when they attempted to follow the Harlem Renaissance's call for self-improvement through education and issues surrounding discrimination, religion, family, and poverty.

Although she was not often appreciated during her time and even today, perhaps one of Bonner's greatest contributions to the Harlem Renaissance was her emphasis on claiming not only a racial identity, but a gendered one as well.[13] Bonner's works focused on the historical specificity of her time and place rather than the universality of an idealized African past.[10] In "On Being Young -- A Woman -- And Colored", Bonner explores the necessarily layered identity of black womanhood, discussing the difficulties that come with belonging to two oppressed groups. She describes it as a "group within a group", and discusses the frustrations that come with expressing anger not only as a woman, but as a black woman - she is doubly expected to express her anger with her own oppression "gently and quietly", once from white society and once more from black male society.[14] She is one of many writers whose efforts to discuss intersectionality have been dismissed, forgotten or largely eradicated from modern canon.[15]

Legacy edit

In more recent years, critical exploration of Marita Bonner has noticeably diminished, having been at its peak in the late 1980s.[13]

Xoregos Performing Company premiered Exit: An Illusion in its 2015 program "Harlem Remembered", repeating the play with a different cast in its "Songs of the Harlem River" program in NYC's Dream Up Festival, August 30–September 6, 2015. Songs of the Harlem River opened the Langston Hughes Festival in Queens, NY, on February 13, 2016.

In 2017, Bonner was inducted into the Chicago Literary Hall of Fame.[16]

Bibliography edit

Short stories edit

  • "The Hands - A Story". Opportunity: A Journal of Negro Life 3 (August 1925): 235–37.
  • "The Prison-Bound". The Crisis 32 (September 1926): 225–26.
  • "Nothing New". The Crisis 33 (November 1926): 17–20.
  • "One Boy's Story". The Crisis 34 (November 1927): 297–99, 316–20 (pseudonym: Joseph Maree Andrew).
  • "Drab Rambles". The Crisis 34 (December 1927): 335–36, 354–56.
  • "A Possible Triad of Black Notes, Part One". Opportunity 11 (July 1933): 205–07.
  • "A Possible Triad of Black Notes, Part Two: Of Jimmie Harris". Opportunity 11 (August 1933): 242–44.
  • "A Possible Triad of Black Notes, Part Three: Three Tales of Living Corner Store". Opportunity 11 (September 1933): 269–71.
  • "Tin Can". Opportunity 12 (July 1934): 202–205, (August 1934): 236–40.
  • "A Sealed Pod". Opportunity 14 (March 1936): 88–91.
  • "Black Fronts". Opportunity 16 (July 1938): 210–14.
  • "Hate is Nothing". The Crisis 45 (December 1938): 388–90, 394, 403–04 (pseudonym: Joyce M. Reed).
  • "The Makin's". Opportunity 17 (January 1939): 18–21.
  • "The Whipping". The Crisis 46 (January 1939): 172–74.
  • "Hongry Fire". The Crisis 46 (December 1939): 360–62, 376–77.
  • "Patch Quilt". The Crisis 47 (March 1940): 71, 72, 92.
  • "One True Love". The Crisis 48 (February 1941): 46–47, 58–59.

Essays edit

  • "On Being Young–A Woman–And Colored". The Crisis (December 1925).
  • "The Young Blood Hungers". The Crisis 35 (May 1928): 151, 172.
  • "Review of Autumn Love Cycle, by Georgia Douglas Johnson". Opportunity 7 (April 1929): 130.

Drama edit

  • "The Pot-Maker (A Play to be Read)". Opportunity 5 (February 1927): 43–46.
  • "The Purple Flower". The Crisis (1928).
  • "Exit - An Illusion". The Crisis 36 (October 1929): 335–36, 352.

See also edit

Further reading edit

  • Flynn, Joyce, and Joyce Occomy Stricklin. Frye Street and Environs: the Collected Works of Marita Bonner. Boston: Beacon Press, 1987.
  • Hine, Darlene C., ed. Black Women in America, an Historical Encyclopedia. Brooklyn: Carlson Inc., 1993.
  • Kent, Alicia. "Race, Gender, and Comparative Black Modernism: Suzanne Lacascade, Marita Bonner, Suzanne Césaire, Dorothy West" (review). Legacy: A Journal of American Women Writers, 2011, Volume 28, Issue 1, pp. 141–143.
  • "PAL: Marita Bonner (1898-1971)"[permanent dead link].archive.csustan.edu. Retrieved September 24, 2015.

References edit

  1. ^ "Chapter History", Iota Chapter Deltas ~ The Iota Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc.
  2. ^ a b Roses, Lorraine Elena, and Ruth Elizabeth Randolph. “Marita Bonner: In Search of Other Mothers' Gardens.” Black American Literature Forum, vol. 21, no. 1/2, 1987, pp. 165–183. JSTOR, JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/2904427.
  3. ^ Radcliffe College (1922). "Marieta Odette Bonner". Yearbook: 25 – via Hathi Trust.
  4. ^ a b Brown, Amy, "Bonner, Marita Odette (1899-1971)", Blackpast.org.
  5. ^ Busby, Margaret (ed.), "Marita Bonner", in Daughters of Africa, London: Jonathan Cape, 1992, p. 211.
  6. ^ Wilks, Jennifer M. (2008). Race, Gender, and Comparative Black Modernism : Suzanne Lacascade, Marita Bonner, Suzanne Césaire, Dorothy West. LSU Press. p. 74. ISBN 978-0807149133 – via ebrary ProQuest.
  7. ^ Wilks (2008). Race, Gender, and Comparative Black Modernism. pp. 74–75.
  8. ^ Cooper, Annie, "On Being Young-A Woman-And Colored. (Documents)", Negro History Bulletin, January–September 1996.
  9. ^ "Marita Bonner", Intimate Circles — American Women in the Arts.
  10. ^ a b Kent, Alicia (2011). "Race, Gender, and Comparative Black Modernism". Legacy. 28 (1): 141–143.
  11. ^ Austin, Doris Jean (March 13, 1988). "THE VOYEUR IN THE MIRROR". The New York Times.
  12. ^ Alston, Joseph, Marie Fidele, and Amelia Powell; edited by Lauren Curtright, "Marita Odette Bonner", Voices from the Gaps, University of Minnesota, 2004.
  13. ^ a b "Chapter 9: The Harlem Renaissance: Marita Bonner (1898–1971)". PAL – Perspectives in American Literature. Retrieved October 15, 2017 – via Paul Reuben.
  14. ^ "Published writings, 1925-1941". Papers of Marita Bonner, 1940–1986, SC 97, 5. Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study.
  15. ^ “Notes to Pages 30-35.” The Sovereignty of Quiet: beyond Resistance in Black Culture, by Kevin Everod. Quashie, Rutgers University Press, 2012, pp. 146–148.
  16. ^ "Marita Bonner: Chicago Literary Hall of Fame Winner". Chicago Literary Hall of Fame. Retrieved 2021-02-25.

External links edit

  • "Marita Bonner Papers, 1940-1986: A Finding Aid" July 15, 2018, at the Wayback Machine. Radcliffe College Archives, Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass. July 2007.
  • "Marita Odette Bonner". VG: Voices From the Gaps - Women Writers and Artists of Color. University of Minnesota, 2009.
  • Reuben, Paul P. "Chapter 9: Marita Bonner". PAL: Perspectives in American Literature- A Research and Reference Guide, September 8, 2019. Retrieved July 23, 2016.

marita, bonner, june, 1899, december, 1971, also, known, marieta, bonner, american, writer, essayist, playwright, commonly, associated, with, harlem, renaissance, other, names, went, were, marita, occomy, marita, odette, bonner, marita, odette, bonner, occomy,. Marita Bonner June 16 1899 December 7 1971 also known as Marieta Bonner was an American writer essayist and playwright who is commonly associated with the Harlem Renaissance Other names she went by were Marita Occomy Marita Odette Bonner Marita Odette Bonner Occomy Marita Bonner Occomy and Joseph Maree Andrew On December 29 1921 along with 15 other women she chartered the Iota chapter of Delta Sigma Theta sorority 1 Marita BonnerBorn 1899 06 16 June 16 1899Boston Massachusetts U S DiedDecember 6 1971 1971 12 06 aged 72 Chicago Illinois U S NationalityAmericanOther namesMarita Occomy Marita Odette Bonner Marita Odette Bonner Occomy Marita Bonner Occomy Joseph Maree AndrewOccupationsPlaywright essayist Contents 1 Life 2 Works 3 Influences on the Harlem Renaissance 4 Legacy 5 Bibliography 5 1 Short stories 5 2 Essays 5 3 Drama 6 See also 7 Further reading 8 References 9 External linksLife editMarita Bonner was born in Boston Massachusetts to Joseph and Anne Noel Bonner Marita was one of four children and was brought up in a middle class community in Massachusetts She attended Brookline High School where she contributed to the school magazine The Sagamore She excelled in German and Music and was a very talented pianist In 1917 she graduated from Brookline High School and in 1918 enrolled in Radcliffe College commuting to campus because many African American students were denied dormitory accommodation In college she majored in English and Comparative Literature while continuing to study German and musical composition At Radcliffe African American students were not permitted to board and many either lived in houses off campus set aside for black students or commuted as Bonner did Bonner was an accomplished student at Radcliffe founding the Radcliffe chapter of Delta Sigma Theta a black sorority and participating in many musical clubs she twice won the Radcliffe song competition She was also accepted to a competitive writing class that was open to 16 students where her professor Charles Townsend Copeland encouraged her not to be bitter when writing a descriptor often used for authors of color 2 In addition to her studies she taught at a high school in Cambridge Massachusetts After finishing her schooling in 1922 3 she continued to teach at Bluefield Colored Institute in West Virginia Two years later she took on a position at Armstrong High School in Washington D C until 1930 during which time her mother and father both died suddenly While in Washington Bonner became closely associated with poet playwright and composer Georgia Douglas Johnson Johnson s S Street salon was an important meeting place for many of the writers and artists involved in the New Negro Renaissance While living in Washington D C Bonner met William Almy Occomy They married and moved to Chicago where Bonner s writing career took off After marrying Occomy she began to write under her married name After 1941 Bonner gave up publishing her works and devoted her time to her family including three children 4 She began teaching again in the 1940s and finally retired in 1963 Bonner died on December 7 1971 from smoke inhalation complications at a hospital after her apartment caught fire 4 She was 73 Works editThroughout her life Bonner wrote many short stories essays and plays and was a frequent contributor to The Crisis the magazine of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and Opportunity official publication of the National Urban League between 1925 and 1940 5 After her parents death she wrote her first essay On Being Young A Woman And Colored December 1925 which highlights the limits put on black Americans especially black women in New York during this time who lacked the full range of New Negro mobility 6 The speaker in this essay also addresses the residential segregation and social constraints she faced as a woman living in the Black Ghetto a community where black Americans were shoved aside in a bundle because of color 7 Winner of the inaugural essay contest sponsored by The Crisis 8 whose literary editor at the time was Jessie Redmon Fauset 9 this essay encouraged black women not to dwell on their problems but to outsmart negative situations Bonner also wrote many short stories between 1925 and 1927 including The Prison Bound Nothing New One Boy s Story and Drab Rambles Her short stories explored a multicultural universe filled with people drawn by the promises of urban life She wrote three plays The Pot Maker 1927 The Purple Flower A Play 1928 and Exit an Illusion 1929 the most famous being The Purple Flower which portrays black liberation Many of Bonner s later works such as Light in Dark Places dealt with poverty poor housing and color discrimination in the black communities and shows the influence that the urban environment has on black communities Bonner is one of the many frequently unrecognized black female writers of the Harlem Renaissance who resisted the universalizing essentialist tendencies by focusing on atypical women rather than on an archetypal man such as the New Negro which can be seen in her earliest works 10 Bonner regularly discussed poverty familial relations urban living colorism feminism and racism in her works She also often wrote about multi ethnic communities such as in Nothing New Bonner was wholly opposed to generalizations of black experience and wrote about several differing black experiences in her short stories and plays She is thus remembered as an advocate for intersectionality and a documentarian of multicultural urban life 11 Bonner sometimes wrote under the pseudonym Joseph Maree Andrew such as when she penned One Boy s Story a short bildungsroman that details the life of a young black boy living in a white town 12 Bonner may have adopted this pseudonym as a reaction to the untimely death of her parents namely her father Joseph who financially supported her schooling 2 Influences on the Harlem Renaissance editMain article Harlem Renaissance Bonner contributed a variety of things to the Harlem Renaissance Her writings addressed the struggles of people who lived outside of Harlem Her greatest involvement was her emphasis on claiming a strong racial and gender identity She argued against sexism and racism and advised other black women to remain silent in order to gain understanding knowledge and truth to fight the oppression of race and gender She also encouraged African Americans to use the weapons of knowledge teaching and writing to overcome inequalities Unlike most Renaissance writers she focused her writings on issues in and around Chicago Several of Bonner s short stories addressed the barriers that African American women faced when they attempted to follow the Harlem Renaissance s call for self improvement through education and issues surrounding discrimination religion family and poverty Although she was not often appreciated during her time and even today perhaps one of Bonner s greatest contributions to the Harlem Renaissance was her emphasis on claiming not only a racial identity but a gendered one as well 13 Bonner s works focused on the historical specificity of her time and place rather than the universality of an idealized African past 10 In On Being Young A Woman And Colored Bonner explores the necessarily layered identity of black womanhood discussing the difficulties that come with belonging to two oppressed groups She describes it as a group within a group and discusses the frustrations that come with expressing anger not only as a woman but as a black woman she is doubly expected to express her anger with her own oppression gently and quietly once from white society and once more from black male society 14 She is one of many writers whose efforts to discuss intersectionality have been dismissed forgotten or largely eradicated from modern canon 15 Legacy editIn more recent years critical exploration of Marita Bonner has noticeably diminished having been at its peak in the late 1980s 13 Xoregos Performing Company premiered Exit An Illusion in its 2015 program Harlem Remembered repeating the play with a different cast in its Songs of the Harlem River program in NYC s Dream Up Festival August 30 September 6 2015 Songs of the Harlem River opened the Langston Hughes Festival in Queens NY on February 13 2016 In 2017 Bonner was inducted into the Chicago Literary Hall of Fame 16 Bibliography editShort stories edit The Hands A Story Opportunity A Journal of Negro Life 3 August 1925 235 37 The Prison Bound The Crisis 32 September 1926 225 26 Nothing New The Crisis 33 November 1926 17 20 One Boy s Story The Crisis 34 November 1927 297 99 316 20 pseudonym Joseph Maree Andrew Drab Rambles The Crisis 34 December 1927 335 36 354 56 A Possible Triad of Black Notes Part One Opportunity 11 July 1933 205 07 A Possible Triad of Black Notes Part Two Of Jimmie Harris Opportunity 11 August 1933 242 44 A Possible Triad of Black Notes Part Three Three Tales of Living Corner Store Opportunity 11 September 1933 269 71 Tin Can Opportunity 12 July 1934 202 205 August 1934 236 40 A Sealed Pod Opportunity 14 March 1936 88 91 Black Fronts Opportunity 16 July 1938 210 14 Hate is Nothing The Crisis 45 December 1938 388 90 394 403 04 pseudonym Joyce M Reed The Makin s Opportunity 17 January 1939 18 21 The Whipping The Crisis 46 January 1939 172 74 Hongry Fire The Crisis 46 December 1939 360 62 376 77 Patch Quilt The Crisis 47 March 1940 71 72 92 One True Love The Crisis 48 February 1941 46 47 58 59 Essays edit On Being Young A Woman And Colored The Crisis December 1925 The Young Blood Hungers The Crisis 35 May 1928 151 172 Review of Autumn Love Cycle by Georgia Douglas Johnson Opportunity 7 April 1929 130 Drama edit The Pot Maker A Play to be Read Opportunity 5 February 1927 43 46 The Purple Flower The Crisis 1928 Exit An Illusion The Crisis 36 October 1929 335 36 352 See also editAfrican Americans African American culture African American history African American literature List of African American writersFurther reading editFlynn Joyce and Joyce Occomy Stricklin Frye Street and Environs the Collected Works of Marita Bonner Boston Beacon Press 1987 Hine Darlene C ed Black Women in America an Historical Encyclopedia Brooklyn Carlson Inc 1993 Kent Alicia Race Gender and Comparative Black Modernism Suzanne Lacascade Marita Bonner Suzanne Cesaire Dorothy West review Legacy A Journal of American Women Writers 2011 Volume 28 Issue 1 pp 141 143 PAL Marita Bonner 1898 1971 permanent dead link archive csustan edu Retrieved September 24 2015 References edit Chapter History Iota Chapter Deltas The Iota Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority Inc a b Roses Lorraine Elena and Ruth Elizabeth Randolph Marita Bonner In Search of Other Mothers Gardens Black American Literature Forum vol 21 no 1 2 1987 pp 165 183 JSTOR JSTOR www jstor org stable 2904427 Radcliffe College 1922 Marieta Odette Bonner Yearbook 25 via Hathi Trust a b Brown Amy Bonner Marita Odette 1899 1971 Blackpast org Busby Margaret ed Marita Bonner in Daughters of Africa London Jonathan Cape 1992 p 211 Wilks Jennifer M 2008 Race Gender and Comparative Black Modernism Suzanne Lacascade Marita Bonner Suzanne Cesaire Dorothy West LSU Press p 74 ISBN 978 0807149133 via ebrary ProQuest Wilks 2008 Race Gender and Comparative Black Modernism pp 74 75 Cooper Annie On Being Young A Woman And Colored Documents Negro History Bulletin January September 1996 Marita Bonner Intimate Circles American Women in the Arts a b Kent Alicia 2011 Race Gender and Comparative Black Modernism Legacy 28 1 141 143 Austin Doris Jean March 13 1988 THE VOYEUR IN THE MIRROR The New York Times Alston Joseph Marie Fidele and Amelia Powell edited by Lauren Curtright Marita Odette Bonner Voices from the Gaps University of Minnesota 2004 a b Chapter 9 The Harlem Renaissance Marita Bonner 1898 1971 PAL Perspectives in American Literature Retrieved October 15 2017 via Paul Reuben Published writings 1925 1941 Papers of Marita Bonner 1940 1986 SC 97 5 Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study Notes to Pages 30 35 The Sovereignty of Quiet beyond Resistance in Black Culture by Kevin Everod Quashie Rutgers University Press 2012 pp 146 148 Marita Bonner Chicago Literary Hall of Fame Winner Chicago Literary Hall of Fame Retrieved 2021 02 25 External links edit Marita Bonner Papers 1940 1986 A Finding Aid Archived July 15 2018 at the Wayback Machine Radcliffe College Archives Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study Harvard University Cambridge Mass July 2007 Marita Odette Bonner VG Voices From the Gaps Women Writers and Artists of Color University of Minnesota 2009 Reuben Paul P Chapter 9 Marita Bonner PAL Perspectives in American Literature A Research and Reference Guide September 8 2019 Retrieved July 23 2016 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Marita Bonner amp oldid 1179415696, 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