University Libraries' LibGuides
Guide to Africana Studies Resources
Guide for students in English Department courses.
This guide contains recommended resources for doing research on Africa and Africans in the Diaspora.
Explore The Ohio State University Libraries Resources
The Ohio State University Libraries provides access to a wide variety of resources. This page features resources that can help you explore themes in Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral.
Author's Books
Wheatley, Phillis. The Collected Works of Phillis Wheatley. New York: Oxford University Press 1988.
Wheatley, Phillis and Vincent Carretta. Complete Writings: Phillis Wheatley. New York:Penguin Books 2001.
Wheatley Phillis and Vincent Carretta. The Writings of Phillis Wheatley. First edition First ed. Oxford University Press 2020.
Oxford African American Studies Center
A digital compendium of historical and cultural African and African American resources. Database features articles from Oxford's reference works, primary sources with specially written commentaries, images, maps, charts and tables.
African American Poetry contains poems by African American poets of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Database includes the first recorded poem by an African American, Lucy Terry Prince's 'Bars Fight' (c.1746).
Black Women Writers contains literature and essays on classism, racism, sexism, homophobia, and other issues facing African, African American, and women of the Diaspora.
The Black Studies Center provides current and historical material for researching African-Americans, Africans in the Diaspora, and Mother Africa. The Database is a fully cross-searchable gateway to Black Studies including access to scholarly essays, recent periodicals, historical newspaper articles, reference books, and other materials.
Database is an assemblage of unpublished Africana material, including letters, speeches, essays, ephemera, interviews, periodicals, and trial transcripts; such as: “The Transcript of the Muhammad Ali Draft Evasion Trial,” “The Black Panther Newspaper,” and Dr. Huey P. Newton Foundation multimedia materials.