Ann Gibson, “Gay and Black in Greenwich Village: Beauford Delaney's Idylls of Integration,” in Patricia Sue Canterbury, Beauford Delaney: From New York to Paris (Minneapolis: Minneapolis Institute of Arts, 2004), 12. Clement Greenberg.
A collection of works by Neal, who was a leader in the Black Arts Movement during the 1960s and 1970s.
This new edition comes with even more quotes, more revolutionaries cited, a reading recommendation page, and a handful of posters and charts. All Power to the People, We've Got a World to Win!
They have seized upon tales of technology gone wrong and mandated that pulp fiction must finally grow up. In these wildly-speculative stories you will discover the company that controls the world from an alley in Greenwich Village.
Making the Trees Shiver is an eclectic collection recreating the magic that is the annual Fort Greene Park Summer Literary Festival.
Neelie Cherkovski lo incluyó en su colección de ensayos Whitman's Wild Child (Los niños salvajes de Whitman), junto con Charles Bukowski, Allen Ginsberg, Gregory Corso y Lawrence Ferlinghetti, entre otros.
This updated edition contains over 50 pages of previously unpublished work, as well as a chronology and full bibliography.
A fuller version of the author's autobiography, without the cuts made by a previous publisher, details his life through 1974, and explains the development of his Black Nationalist views and his embrace of Islam and Marxism.
A collection of some of LeRoi Jones' most famous poems includes Civil Rights Poem, Young Soul, and Preface to a Twenty Volume Suicide Note
Poetry. African American Studies. "The publication of Amiri Baraka's SOMEBODY BLEW UP AMERICA & OTHER POEMS makes one more mark in the development in modern Black radical & revolutionary cultural reconstruction.
Controversial literary legend Amiri Baraka's new short story collection will shock and awe.
A long poem in the tradition of the Djalʹi (Griots) ; it tries to tell the history/life like an ongoing-offcoming tale.
I sometimes disagree insistently with Amiri, and it's mutual; but when he gets past his parochial pyrotechnics, as in choruses in this book, he brings you into the life force of this music."--Nat Hentoff, author of The Jazz Life
Raise: essays since 1965
Raise, Race, Rays, Raze: Essays Since 1965
In this brilliant assemblage of his writings on music, the first such collection in nearly twenty years, Baraka blends autobiography, history, musical analysis, and political commentary to recall the sounds, people, times, and places he's ...
Selected by Paul Vangelisti, this volume comprises the fullest spectrum of Baraka’s rousing, revolutionary poems, from his first collection to previously unpublished pieces composed during his final years.
Includes a special number published in the summer of 1971 called "The Intrepid-Bear issue: Intrepid 20/Floating Bear 38."
“A fevered and impressionistic riff on the struggles of blacks in the urban North and rural South, as told through the prism of The Inferno.” —Kirkus Reviews This 1965 novel is a remarkable narrative of childhood and youth, structured ...
"A remarkable narrative of childhood and youth's spiraling out of Dante's Inferno."--