Numerous and diverse agendas have competed for consideration in attempts to establish and set the parameters of the black aesthetic tradition. W.E.B. DuBois and James Weldon Johnson are only two of several prominent Americans who have participated in this continuing and frequently intense dialogue. Yet perhaps no voice has been more consistently consulted and valued than that of Sterling A. Brown, distinguished teacher, scholar, poet, and critic. Despite the general acknowledgement of Brown\u27s contributions to American literature in general and black American literature in particular, comprehensive scholarly analyses of his unique contributions have been limited. Joanne V. Gabbin addresses this void in the scholarship in Sterling A. Brown...
The Minority Presence in American Literature: 1600-1900, volumes I and II, is the first publication ...
These biographical profiles of well-known and not so well-known African Americans are presented from...
The centrality of black women\u27s fiction writers may have been a fact before the publication of Pr...
Sterling Brown: Building the Black Aesthetic Tradition By Joanne V. Gabbin, Greenwood Press, Westpor...
This revised biography of Franz Fanon (first published in 1973) is a welcome event for those who e...
In 1925 Professor Alain Locke argued in The New Negro that the Negro was moving forward under the c...
Part of the Indiana University series on Blacks in the Diaspora, this book brings together ten essay...
According to Bell, his book is a comprehensive sociopsychological, sociocultural interpretive histo...
The seven carefully documented essays in literary criticism in this excellent short volume are possi...
Richard Newman, who has previously published a number of bibliographies on various subjects in Afro-...
In her Preface to this study, Lean\u27tin Bracks describes her purpose as being to describe a mod...
Of all the annotated bibliographies of black literature that have crossed this writer\u27s desk duri...
This catalogue, named for the 1990 Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art (SCCA) exhibition in Win...
This is another reprint of Marion Wilson Starling\u27s breakthrough study of the slave narrative, wh...
The past five years have seen the publication of several works in the field of black classicism, fro...
The Minority Presence in American Literature: 1600-1900, volumes I and II, is the first publication ...
These biographical profiles of well-known and not so well-known African Americans are presented from...
The centrality of black women\u27s fiction writers may have been a fact before the publication of Pr...
Sterling Brown: Building the Black Aesthetic Tradition By Joanne V. Gabbin, Greenwood Press, Westpor...
This revised biography of Franz Fanon (first published in 1973) is a welcome event for those who e...
In 1925 Professor Alain Locke argued in The New Negro that the Negro was moving forward under the c...
Part of the Indiana University series on Blacks in the Diaspora, this book brings together ten essay...
According to Bell, his book is a comprehensive sociopsychological, sociocultural interpretive histo...
The seven carefully documented essays in literary criticism in this excellent short volume are possi...
Richard Newman, who has previously published a number of bibliographies on various subjects in Afro-...
In her Preface to this study, Lean\u27tin Bracks describes her purpose as being to describe a mod...
Of all the annotated bibliographies of black literature that have crossed this writer\u27s desk duri...
This catalogue, named for the 1990 Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art (SCCA) exhibition in Win...
This is another reprint of Marion Wilson Starling\u27s breakthrough study of the slave narrative, wh...
The past five years have seen the publication of several works in the field of black classicism, fro...
The Minority Presence in American Literature: 1600-1900, volumes I and II, is the first publication ...
These biographical profiles of well-known and not so well-known African Americans are presented from...
The centrality of black women\u27s fiction writers may have been a fact before the publication of Pr...