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  1. "THE TWO OFFERS"Frances Ellen Watkins Harper's (1825–1911) "The Two Offers" is believed to be the first short story published by an African American author. This accomplishment would be one of many firsts in the extraordinary career of the nineteenth century's most well-known black writer. Source for information on The Two Offers: American History Through Literature 1820-1870 dictionary.

  2. Other articles where The Two Offers is discussed: Frances E.W. Harper: …various periodicals; her story “The Two Offers” in the Anglo-African Magazine in September–October 1859 was said to be the first published by an African American author.

  3. Two Offers" appears in a recent major anthology of American literature (Lauter 1925-32), perhaps a firmer position for this work will develop in our critical estimation, something as long overdue as is a full-length study of Harper's writings.2 Trying to decode this current critical oversight can be problematical, but clues do surface.

  4. THE TWO OFFERS (1859) by Frances Watkins Harper (1825-1911) | Women Who Dared: 19th-Century American Women Writers | A Series of Short Fiction Curated and Re...

  5. 4 de abr. de 2022 · By NASRULLAH MAMBROL on April 4, 2022. Known as the first short story published by an African American, The Two Offers (1859) also marks Frances Ellen Watkins Harper’s first published fiction. From this very first story, Harper emphasizes a womanhood of independence, education, equality, and charity. Harper does….

  6. ÒThe Two OffersÓ 1859 Frances Ellen Watkins [Harper] (1825Ð1911) was born to a free African American woman in Baltimore, a city that was then home to over ten thousand free blacks as well as several thousand slaves. Having studied at her uncleÕs school, the William Watkins Academy for Negro Youth, she worked as a servant but eventually became a

  7. In 1859, Harper published a short story in the Anglo-African Magazine called “The Two Offers.” This short story about women’s education became was the first short story published by an African American woman. On November 22, 1860, Frances married Fenton Harper and the couple had a daughter named Mary.