Christin Marie Taylor is assistant professor of English at Shenandoah University. Taylor’s work has appeared in Southern Quarterly, Southern Cultures, American Literature in Transition: 1960–1970, and the Encyclopedia of Hip Hop Literature as well as Teaching the Works of Eudora Welty: Twenty-First-Century Approaches, published by University Press of Mississippi.
"Labor Pains significantly expands Popular Front scholarship and is rewarding reading specially for students of southern and African American literature.--Annette Trefzer ""The Southern Register"" Christin Marie Taylor offers a revealing and rewarding portrait of the souls of black folk--confessed and imaginary--in the writing of the Popular Front. She breaks the mold of most earlier scholarship on US literary radicalism in her focus on a specifically southern modernism and in her shift of attention from labor representation to labor affect, from the capital-P politics to the pleasures and pains of unrecognized black work.--William J. Maxwell, author of F.B. Eyes: How J. Edgar Hoover's Ghostreaders Framed African American Literature and New Negro, Old Left: African-American Writing and Communism Between the Wars"