Emma Hamilton Dancing
Publications
Negro Evolution. Talladega, AL: n.p., 1900.
Abraham Lincoln, Man and Statesman (Abridged). Talladega, AL: Self-published, 1910.
Grounds of Hope for the American Negro. New York, NY: American Missionary Association, 1911.
The Heir of Slaves: An Autobiography. Boston, MA: The Pilgrim Press, 1911.
The Ultimate Effects of Segregation & Discrimination: The Seldom Thought on The Negro Problem. n.p., 1915.
The New Negro: His Political, Civil and Mental Status and Related Essays. New York, NY: Neale Publishing Company, 1916.
The Negro In The Light Of The Great War. Baltimore, MD: n.p., 1918.
The Lowest Struggler in the Struggle for Democracy. Baltimore, MD: Morgan College, 1918.
The Kind of Democracy the Negro Race Expects. Baltimore, MD: Herald Printing Company, 1919.
Lynching and Debt-Slavery. New York, NY: American Civil Liberties Union, 1921.
Nannie Burroughs and the School of the Three B’s. New York, NY: n.p., 1921.
The Vengeance of the Gods: And Three Other Stories of Real American Color Line Life. Philadelphia, PA: The A.M.E. Book Concern, 1922.
Bursting Bonds. Boston, MA: Jordan & More Press, 1923.
"The 'Colored' United States; Arkansas—A Study in Suppresion," The Messenger 5, no. 1 (1923).
"Things Nobody Believes; A Lesson In Religion," The Messenger 5, no. 2 (1923).
"Intelligent Christianity; Not the Fear of Hell," The Messenger 5, no. 4 (1923).
"Review of The Modern Ku Klux Klan," The Messenger 5, no. 5 (1923).
"A Platform For Black and White," The Messenger 5, no. 9 (1923).
"Art and Propaganda," The Messenger 6, no. 4 (1924).
American Aesop: Negro and Other Humor. Boston, MA: The Jordan & More Press, 1926.
Racial Segregation. New York, NY: Fellowship of Reconciliation, 1927.
Frederick Douglass and The Spirit of Freedom (Abridged). New York, NY: Self-published, 1931.
Aftermath of a Lynching. New York, NY: National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, 1931.
"Why the Negro Must Be Anti-Fascist," New Masses 31, no. 10 (1939).