Jacinta R. Saffold
 
 
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What Is The Essence Book ProJect?

The Essence Book Project is a computational database of Essence Magazine’s bestsellers’ list for fiction, which was published monthly from 1994-2010 and includes nearly 500 discreet works of fiction, most of which were written by and about Black people. The bestsellers’ list was based on sales data collected from independently owned Black bookstores across the United States, making it one of the most economically accurate archival sources for contemporary African American literature.

This project is an intentionally data driven digital collection that catalogues and computationally conceptualizes the Black literary landscape at the turn of the twenty-first century. Working from a database of the full run of Essence Magazine’s Best Sellers’ list for fiction and a subset of the Black Book Interactive Project’s corpus of the optical character recognition (OCR) versions of each title on the list, The Essence Book Project helps illuminate how robust Black reading communities helped ensure that Black culture remained ahead of the digital turn.

This project specifically addresses the many and complicated silences around African American literature published in the last thirty years. The Essence Book Project also points to new approaches to engaging twentieth and twenty-first century popular African American Studies archival sources; chief among them are Essence, Ebony, and Jet magazines.


The Essence Book Project addresses the complicated silences around African American literature published in the last thirty years.
 

 

Related Information

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The Black Book Interactive Program—Extending the Reach

 

 

Hustling Books: Black Independent Publishing in Street Lit

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The Essence Book Project Interview Series

“Black Bestselling Books & Bibliographical Concerns: A Conversation Between Kinohi Nishikawa and Jacinta R. Saffold” Sponsored by the Bibliographical Society of America

“The Toni-Terry Problem with Black Books: A Conversation with Essence Bestsellers’ Virginia DeBerry and Donna Grant” Cosponsored by the Bibliographical Society of America and the Society of Fellows in Critical Bibliography

 

 

“Gathering Blossoms Under Fire: Author Talk Back with Alice Walker and Jacinta R. Saffold” Sponsored by the Black Women’s Studies Association.

“Hip Hop Print Culture: An Interview with Omar Tyree.” Words. Beats. Life: The Global Journal of Hip Hop Culture

Keep an eye out for more interviews, coming soon.