
Title
- Blacks In The Diaspora
Attribution
Katharine Capshaw SmithPublication Details
BookIndiana University Press2004Availability
LOCATION CALL # STATUS (UPPER LEVEL) PS153.N5 S62 2004 AVAILABLE New Feature: Text this to your cellphone
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Description
The Harlem Renaissance inaugurated a tradition of African American children?s literature, for the movement?s central writers made youth both their subject and audience. Kate Capshaw Smith explores the period?s vigorous exchange about the nature and identity of black childhood and uncovers the networks of African American philosophers, community activists, schoolteachers, and literary artists who worked together to transmit black history and culture to the next generation. (automatically summarized from Amazon.com)Subject
- American literature — African American authors — History and criticism
- American literature — New York (State) — New York — History and criticism
- Children’s literature, American — History and criticism
- African American children — Books and reading
- African American children in literature
- African Americans in literature
- Harlem Renaissance
- Harlem (New York, N.Y.) — Intellectual life — 20th century
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Notes
- "The New Negro Renaissance, the period associated with the flowering of the arts in Harlem, inaugurated a tradition of African American children’s literature, for the movement’s central writers made youth both their subject and audience, W.E.B. Du Bois, Carter G. Woodson, Langston Hughes, Alice Dunbar-Nelson, and other Harlem Renaissance figures took an impassioned interest in the literary models offered to children, believing that the "New Negro" would ultimately arise from black youth." "This book explores the period’s vigorous exchange about the nature and identity of black childhood and uncovers the networks of African American philosophers, community activists, schoolteachers, and literary artists who worked together to transmit black history and culture to the next generation."–BOOK JACKET
Contents
- 1. The emblematic black child : Du Bois’s Crisis publications
- 2. Creating the past, present, and future : new Negro children’s drama
- 3. The legacy of the South : revisiting the plantation tradition
- 4. The peacemakers : Carter G. Woodson’s circle
- 5. The aesthetics of Black children’s literature : Arna Bontemps and Langston Hughes
ISBN
- 0253344433
LCCN
Open Library ID
-

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