The Portable Harlem Renaissance Reader (Portable Library)
From its beginnings in 1919, with soldiers returning from the Great War, to its sputtering end in 1934, with the Great Depression, the New Negro Movement in arts and letters ...
Library Journal
Editor Lewis is a noted author of several books, e.g., When Harlem Was in Vogue ( LJ 3/15/81) and, most recently, W.E.B. DuBois: Biography of a Race, 1868-1919 ( LJ 8/93). This hefty tome features many significant essays, poems, and stories not readily available to all scholars that are drawn from African American journals of the period, including Opportunity, Crisis, and Fire! In his introduction, Lewis carefully explores tension within this arts and letters movement. The collected excerpts of writers like Cullen, Hurston, Hughes, McKay, DuBois, and Wright represent a balance between those Renaissance supporters and writers who ``saw the small cracks in the wall of racism that could, they anticipated, be widened through the production of exemplary racial images'' and those who ``saw art not as politics by other means--civil rights between covers or from a stage or an easel.'' This anthology will balance and enhance any modern American literature collection.-- Faye A. Chadwell, Univ. of South Carolina Lib., Columbia
Name in long format: | The Portable Harlem Renaissance Reader (Portable Library) |
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ISBN-10: | 0140170367 |
ISBN-13: | 9780140170368 |
Book pages: | 816 |
Book language: | en |
Edition: | 13th printing |
Binding: | Paperback |
Publisher: | Penguin Classics |
Dimensions: | Height: 1.49 Inches, Length: 7.81 Inches, Weight: 1.18 Pounds, Width: 5.04 Inches |