African American Research Center, Library, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Notes:
371 p, Contents: The problem of the problem of form -- Possession as metaphor : Lamming's Season of adventure -- The space between negations -- Assassins of the voice : Martin Carter's Poems of affinity, 1978-1980 -- Three for V -- The shape of that hurt : an introduction to Voiceprint -- Megalleons of light : Edward Brathwaite's Sun poem -- Brathwaite with a dash of brown :crit, the writer and the written life -- The rehumanization of history : regeneration of spirit, apocalypse and revolution in Brathwaite's The arrivants and X/Self -- Trophy and catastrophe : Guiyana Prize feature address -- Apocalypso and the Soca fires of 1990.
New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers The State University of New Jersey
Location:
African American Research Center, Library, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Notes:
319 p., Argues that despite the inherent racist implications of classical and modern formulations of the heroic, the hero remains a site of struggle and resistance for writers of and in the African Diaspora. This project considers a genealogy of writers beginning with Ralph Ellison whose novel, Invisible Man and short story, "Flying Home," engage with classic and then contemporary forms of the heroic and seek to carve out a space for the African American heroic. Considers novels and short stories produced by the next generation of writers, specifically the work of Charles Johnson and Toni Cade Bambara, who inherit Ellison's legacy of engagement with aesthetic and political implications of social and popular cultural movements and history. Argues that these writers come to very different conclusions as to the efficacy of the "hero." Concludes the dissertation with the work of Michelle Cliff and Patricia Powell, whose work take us to the Anglo Caribbean and enables me to think through the movement of this figure through conduits of colonial and global capital and the resiliency of contemporary struggles, political and aesthetic, with this figure as a site of resistance and revolution.
Bell,Roseann P. (Editor), Parker, (Editor), and Sheftall,Beverly Guy (Editor)
Format:
Book, Edited
Publication Date:
1979
Published:
Garden City, NY: Anchor Press
Location:
African American Research Center, Library, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Notes:
422 p, Includes Eintou Apandaye's "The Caribbean woman as writer," Ellease Southerland's "The influence of voodoo on the fiction of Zora Neale Hurston," L. Anthony-Welch's "Wisdom : an interview with C.L.R. James," Marvin Williams' "Poem for a Rasta daughter," Nicolás Guillén' s "Angela Davis," among others.