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Nelson, Angela M. (2008). "African American Stereotypes in Prime-Time Television: An Overview, 1948–2007". In Boyd, Todd (ed.). African Americans and Popular Culture, Volume 1: Theater, Film, and Television. Westport, Conn.: Praeger Publishers. pp. 185–216. ISBN978-0-313-06408-1.
Santiago-Valles, Kelvin (1999). "'Still Longing for de Old Plantation': The Visual Parodies and Racial National Imaginary of US Overseas Expansionism, 1898-1903". American Studies International. 37 (3): 18–43. ISSN0883-105X. JSTOR41279710.
The article opens:
Pickaninny (also pickaninny, pickaninny or pickaninny) is a word ...
I don't know what the intended list of alternate forms should contain. Perhaps an editor has fallen afoul of some kind of spell-check or auto-correction.
122.148.227.2 (talk) 10:43, 3 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]
An advertisement in one magazine for artwork or a regular feature in another magazine hardly constitutes OR. The "Piccaninnies' Pages" was a two-page children's feature in the "Australian Woman's Mirror" from the 1920s to 1960s, consisting mostly of original work by young children.
A children's page in a popular women's magazine not affectionate? The feature ran for over 20 years with the same whimsical banner. Nowadays it might be called "Kids' Pages" but in those days "kids" was deprecated. Doug butler (talk) 21:28, 24 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]