Template:WN:Bib
- Adams, Laura (1976). Existential Battles: The Growth of Norman Mailer. Athens, OH: Ohio UP.
- Baldwin, James (1988). "The Black Boy Looks at the White Boy". Collected Essays. New York: Library of America. pp. 269–285.
- Ehrlich, Robert (1978). Norman Mailer: The Radical as Hipster. Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow Press.
- Gutman, Stanley T. (1975). Mankind in Barbary: The Individual and Society in the Novels of Norman Mailer. Hanover, NH: The University Press of New England.
- Holmes, John Clellon (February 1, 1958). "The Philosophy of the Beat Generation". Esquire. pp. 35–47. Retrieved 2019-03-23.
- Leland, John (2004). Hip: The History. New York: Harper Collins.
- Lennon, J. Michael (2013). Norman Mailer: A Double Life. New York: Simon and Schuster.
- Levine, Andrea (2003). "The (Jewish) White Negro: Norman Mailer's Racial Bodies". MELUS. 28 (2): 59–81. Retrieved 2021-03-15.
- Malaquais, Jean (1959). "Reflections on Hip". In Mailer, Norman. Advertisements for Myself. pp. 359–62.
- Marx, Gary T. (1967). "The White Negro and the Negro White". Phylon. 28 (2): 168–177. Retrieved 2021-03-15.
- McKinley, Maggie (2015). Masculinity and the Paradox of Violence in American Fiction, 1950-1975. New York: Bloomsbury.
- Mosser, Jason (2017). "'The White Negro': A Selective Bibliography". The Mailer Review. 11 (1): 208–224. Retrieved 2020-10-20.
- O'Neil, Paul (November 30, 1959). "The Only Rebellion Around". Life Magazine. Vol. 47 no. 22. pp. 115+.
- Petigny, Alan (2007). "Norman Mailer, 'The White Negro,' and New Conceptions of the Self in Postwar America". The Mailer Review. 1 (1): 184–193. Retrieved 2021-03-15.
- Podhoretz, Norman (1958). "The Know-Nothing Bohemians". Partisan Review. Vol. 25 no. 2. pp. 305+.
- Polsky, Ned (1959). "Reflections on Hip". In Mailer, Norman. Advertisements for Myself. pp. 365–69.
- Solotaroff, Robert (1972). Down Mailer’s Way. Urbana: University of Illinois Press.
- Wenke, Joe (2013). Mailer's America. Stamford, CT: Trans Uber LLC.
- Whiting, Frederick (2005). "Stronger, Smarter, and Less Queer: 'The White Negro' and Mailer's Third Man". Women’s Studies Quarterly. 35 (¾): 189–214.