Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Margery_Latimer> ?p ?o }
- Margery_Latimer abstract "Margery Bodine Latimer (February 6, 1899 – August 16, 1932), born in Portage, Wisconsin, was an American writer, feminist theorist, and social activist. She moved to New York City before finishing college and became involved in its cultural life. Latimer published two highly acclaimed novels, We Are Incredible (1928) and This is My Body (1930), and two collections of short stories, Nellie Bloom and Other Stories (1929), and Guardian Angel and Other Stories (1932). (This was reprinted in a new edition in 1984.)Her formally experimental fiction was greatly influenced by the modernism of the 1920s. Reviewers of the period compared her to Gertrude Stein, James Joyce, and D. H. Lawrence. Her work reflects her feminist, socialist, and anti-racist ideals.".
- Margery_Latimer alias "Toomer, Margery".
- Margery_Latimer birthDate "1899-02-06".
- Margery_Latimer birthPlace Portage,_Wisconsin.
- Margery_Latimer birthYear "1899".
- Margery_Latimer deathDate "1932-08-16".
- Margery_Latimer deathPlace Chicago.
- Margery_Latimer deathPlace Illinois.
- Margery_Latimer deathYear "1932".
- Margery_Latimer influenced Meridel_Le_Sueur.
- Margery_Latimer influencedBy Zona_Gale.
- Margery_Latimer movement List_of_feminist_literature.
- Margery_Latimer notableWork We_Are_Incredible.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageExternalLink latimer_thenewfreedom.pdf.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageID "10299862".
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageLength "12136".
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageOutDegree "67".
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageRevisionID "663773863".
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Anne_Bradstreet.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Briggsville,_Wisconsin.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Cane.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Carl_Rakosi.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Carl_Van_Vechten.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Carmel-by-the-Sea,_California.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Category:1899_births.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Category:1932_deaths.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Category:20th-century_American_novelists.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Category:20th-century_women_writers.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Category:American_women_novelists.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Category:Deaths_in_childbirth.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Category:Modernist_women_writers.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Category:People_from_Portage,_Wisconsin.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Category:University_of_Wisconsin–Madison_alumni.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Century.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Chicago.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Chicago_Tribune.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink College_of_Wooster.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink D._H._Lawrence.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Doylestown,_Pennsylvania.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Feminism.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink File:Jean_Toomer,_Margery_Latimer.jpg.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink George_Gurdjieff.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Georgia_OKeeffe.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Gertrude_Stein.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Greenwich_Village.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Harlem_Renaissance.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Illinois.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink James_Joyce.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Jean_Toomer.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink John_Cotton_(minister).
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Kenneth_Fearing.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink List_of_feminist_literature.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Marjorie_Content.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink McCalls.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Meridel_Le_Sueur.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Miscegenation.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Modernism.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Multiracial.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink New_York_City.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Pasadena,_California.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Portage,_Wisconsin.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Pulitzer_Prize.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Quakers.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Santa_Fe,_New_Mexico.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Saturday_Review_(U.S._magazine).
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Short_story.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Suffragette.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink The_American_Caravan.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink The_Bookman_(New_York).
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink The_New_Masses.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink The_New_York_Times.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink The_Reviewer.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink University_of_Wisconsin–Madison.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Walt_Kuhn.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink We_Are_Incredible.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLink Zona_Gale.
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageWikiLinkText "Margery Latimer".
- Margery_Latimer alternativeNames "Toomer, Margery".
- Margery_Latimer birthDate "1899-02-06".
- Margery_Latimer birthPlace Portage,_Wisconsin.
- Margery_Latimer caption "Margery Latimer, 1932".
- Margery_Latimer dateOfBirth "1899-02-06".
- Margery_Latimer dateOfDeath "1932-08-16".
- Margery_Latimer deathDate "1932-08-16".
- Margery_Latimer deathPlace Chicago.
- Margery_Latimer deathPlace Illinois.
- Margery_Latimer imageSize "180".
- Margery_Latimer influenced Meridel_Le_Sueur.
- Margery_Latimer influences Zona_Gale.
- Margery_Latimer movement List_of_feminist_literature.
- Margery_Latimer name "Latimer, Margery Bodine".
- Margery_Latimer name "Margery Bodine Latimer Toomer".
- Margery_Latimer nationality "American".
- Margery_Latimer notableworks "This is My Body".
- Margery_Latimer notableworks "We Are Incredible,".
- Margery_Latimer occupation "Novelist, writer".
- Margery_Latimer placeOfBirth "Portage, Wisconsin".
- Margery_Latimer placeOfDeath "Chicago, Illinois".
- Margery_Latimer shortDescription "American writer".
- Margery_Latimer wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Authority_control.