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  • Home
  • Issues
    • 2020s
      • Issue 12 2023
      • Issue 11 2022
      • Issue 10 2020-21
      • Issue 9 2020
    • 2010s
      • Issue 8 2018-19
      • Issue 7 2018
      • Issue 6 2017
      • Issue 5 2016
      • Issue 4 2015
      • Issue 3 2014
      • Issue 2 2010
    • 2000s
      • Issue 1 2009
    • ARCHIVE
      • IJAS ONLINE 2009-
      • IJAS 1992-2004
  • Articles
    Random
    • Depictions of Shame: White Identity and Cultural Blackness in Faulkner’s Absalom, Absalom! and Styron’s Confessions of Nat Turner

      Beatrice Melodia Festa
      Articles, Issue 10 2020-21
    Recent
    • Respectability Politics and the Culture of Dissemblance in Stanley Kramer’s Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner and Jack Hill’s Foxy Brown

      Niamh Keating
    • “It was only the darkened house that could contain her”: Containing Forms in The Scarlet Letter

      Georgia Walton
    • “Seeming Strangeness”: Mina Loy’s Poetics of Disruption and Julia Kristeva’s Semiotic/Symbolic Model

      Eva Isherwood-Wallace
    • Cold Reality: Revisions of War in John Knowles’ “Phineas” and A Separate Peace

      Natalie Schriefer
    • The State Department’s Northern Ireland Special Envoys and the redemption of the Good Friday Agreement

      Richard Hargy
    • “a settled place”: Reproductive Performance in the Liberties and The Liberties

      Lily Ní Dhomhnaill
  • Reviews
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    • Review: Wills, Gamer Nation: Video Games and American Culture

      Eoin O'Callaghan
      Issue 11 2022, Reviews
    Recent
    • Review: Lahr, Arthur Miller: American Witness

      Ciarán Leinster
    • Review: Robert Collins, Noraid and The Northern Ireland Troubles, 1970-1994

      Melissa L. Baird
    • Review: Brian Yothers, Melville’s Mirrors: Literary Criticism and America’s Most Elusive Author

      Sebastian Tants-Boestad
    • Review: Charles L. Chavis Jr., The Silent Shore: The Lynching of Matthew Williams and the Politics of Racism in the Free State

      Guy Lancaster
    • Review: Warren Eugene Milteer, Jr. Beyond Slavery’s Shadow: Free People of Color in the South

      Nik Ribianszky
    • Review: Baumgartner, South to Freedom: Runaway Slaves to Mexico and the Road to the Civil War

      Laura Gillespie
  • Interviews
    Random
    • The IAAS's Americanista: An Interview with Catherine Gander (IAAS Chair)

      Caroline Schroeter and Sarah McCreedy
      Interviews, Issue 9 2020
    Recent
    • From Mitchelstown to Michigan: Kevin Roche’s Formative Years

      Ellen Rowley
  • Contributors
    • Issue 12 2023
    • Issue 11 2022
    • Issue 10 2020-21
    • Issue 9 2020
    • Issue 8 2018-19
    • Issue 7 2018
    • Issue 6 2017
    • Issue 5 2016
    • Issue 3 2014
    • Issue 4 2015
    • Issue 3 2014
  • About IJAS Online
    • Submissions
    • Books For Review
  • About IAAS
READ MORE:
  • Review: Lahr, Arthur Miller: American Witness
  • Review: Robert Collins, Noraid and The Northern Ireland Troubles, 1970-1994
  • Respectability Politics and the Culture of Dissemblance in Stanley Kramer’s Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner and Jack Hill’s Foxy Brown
  • Review: Brian Yothers, Melville’s Mirrors: Literary Criticism and America’s Most Elusive Author

Author Guy Lancaster

Guy Lancaster

Guy Lancaster holds a Ph.D. in Heritage Studies from Arkansas State University and currently serves as the editor of the online Encyclopedia of Arkansas, a project of the Central Arkansas Library System. He has authored, co-authored, or edited six books on race and violence, including American Atrocity: The Types of Violence in Lynching (University of Arkansas Press, 2021).

Review: Charles L. Chavis Jr., The Silent Shore: The Lynching of Matthew Williams and the Politics of Racism in the Free State

Guy Lancaster
Issue 12 2023, Reviews
Chavis, Charles L. Jr. The Silent Shore: The Lynching of Matthew Williams and the Politics of Racism in the Free State. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2021. ISBN 9781421442921. $29.95. 288pp.  Th... Read More...
EISSN (2009-2377)