Harrison, Anthony Kwame2025-02-212025-02-212025-01-300035-1121https://hdl.handle.net/10919/124676In this article, I explore the emergence of a developing literary tradition focusing on African Americans living in mountainous regions. In doing this, I discuss the appearance of the term “Affrilachian”—combining African (American) and Appalachian—as a distinct Black American mountain identity. I additionally examine three post-1970s books, all written by African American authors in different decades, that illustrate important contours in the development of this literary field: David Bradley’s The Chaneysville Incident (1981); Henry Louis Gates Jr’s Colored People (1994); and Crystal Wilkerson’s The Birds of Opulence (2016). All three books present alternative visions of how Black people belong among mountains and negotiate the racist structures that have historically worked to deny their connection to them. In tracing the differences between the three books, I underscore a steady progression towards more liberatory and affective attachments to land. Ultimately, I argue that the emergence of this new literary tradition, centering Black mountain life, both affirms and advances African Americans’ longstanding connections to mountains, and opens up additional space for recognizing their contemporary place among them.application/pdfenCreative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 InternationalMountainsBlack AmericansLiteratureRepresentationAppalachiaWriting Black Life in Mountains: Race and Representation in an Emerging American Literary FieldArticle - RefereedRevue de Geographie Alpinehttps://doi.org/10.4000/139ts11231760-7426