Thomas Jr. Dixon Criticism
- Introduction
- Principal Works
-
Essays
- Brotherly Love
- Whitman and Dixon: A Strange Case of Borrowing
- The Greatest Play of the South
- Introduction to The Clansman: An Historical Romance of the Ku Klux Klan
- A Battleground Revisited: Reconstruction in Southern Fiction, 1895-1905
- Novelist
- Uncle Tom Reconstructed: A Neglected Chapter in the History of a Book
- The Birth of a Nation: Prohibition Propaganda
- The Rhetoric of Racism: Thomas Dixon and the ‘Damned Black Beast.’
- ‘One of the Meanest Books’: Thomas Dixon, Jr. and The Leopard's Spots.
- Constitutional Ideology and Progressive Fiction
- Re-Membering Blackness after Reconstruction: Race, Rape, and Political Desire in the Work of Thomas Dixon, Jr.
- (K)night Riders in (K)night Gowns: The Ku Klux Klan, Race, and Constructions of Masculinity
- Writing from the Right during the ‘Red Decade’: Thomas Dixon's Attack on W. E. B. DuBois and James Weldon Johnson in The Flaming Sword
- Coming between the ‘Black Beast’ and the White Virgin: The Pressures of Liminality in Thomas Dixon
- Thomas Dixon's The Clansman: Radicals, Reactionaries, and the Anticipated Utopia
- Thomas Dixon and the Rhetorical Mulatto
- Further Reading