From the earliest texts of the colonial period to works contemporary with Emancipation, African American literature has been a dialogue across color lines, and a medium through which black writers have been able to exert considerable authority on both sides of that racial demarcation. Dickson D. Bruce argues that contrary to prevailing perceptions of African American voices as silenced and excluded from American history, those voices were loud and clear. Within the context of the wider culture, these writers offered powerful, widely read, and widely appreciated commentaries on American ideals and ambitions. The Origins of African American Literature provides strong evidence to demonstrate just how much writers engaged in a surprising number of dialogues with society as a whole. Along with an extensive discussion of major authors and texts, including Phillis Wheatley's poetry, Frederick Douglass's Narrative, Harriet Jacobs' Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, and Martin Delany's Blake, Bruce explores less-prominent works and writers as well, thereby grounding African American writing in its changing historical settings. The Origins of African American Literature is an invaluable revelation of the emergence and sources of the specifically African American literary tradition and the forces that helped shape it.
Having its origins in the slave narratives and the folktales transmitted orally during that period, the literature of the African American has been rich and varied. Beginning with the first...
This one-volume, comprehensive overview of African American history brings together original essays by some of the foremost authorities in the field.
Harris proposes an almost maternal relationship, a sort of love (to take from Eric Lott), between the white boy and the black man located in an idealized past. Harris's plantation literature visions of the antebellum past become ...
Essays dealing with early African American literature.
In 1987 Bernard W. Bell published The Afro-American Novel and Its Tradition, a comprehensive interpretive history of more than 150 novels written by African Americans from 1853 to 1983. The...
After all, we are still more likely to encounter an essay, or a pedagogical approach, that “complicates” the category of race in the study of, say, Zora Neale Hurston's work than to find complicat— ...
3 (Autumn 1994): 293–324; Black Puritan, Black Republican: The Life and Thought of Lemuel Haynes, 1753–1833 (New York: Oxford University Press, 2003); and Peter Thompson's “David Walker's Nationalism – And Thomas Jefferson's,” Journal ...
The (Underground) Railroad in African American Literature offers a brief history of the African American experience of the railroad and the uses of railroad history by a wide assortment of twentieth-century African American poets, ...
Henry Wilson , J. Mercer Langston , Esq .; David Lee Child . Esq .; Rev. Daniel A. Payne , Hon . Anson Burlinggame , James M. Whitfield , ( the Poet ; ) Robert Purvis . Esq . ; Hon . J. R. Giddings , Rev. Henry Highland Garnet , Prof.
This volume reframes mid-century African American literature and challenges our current understandings of both African American and American literature.