Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Southern Black Creative Writers, 1829-1953

View through CrossRef
Some 230 writers are included, and for each the compiler has provided, in addition to a publication history, a brief summary of educational background, occupation, and honors and awards obtained. The most important feature of any work of this kind is the careful selection of those names to be included. Foster has chosen well. . . . Inclusion of lesser-known authors makes this volume useful.Choice This new biobibliographical guide identifies known and little known Southern black writers to 1953, many of whom have received scant critical attention over the years. A large number of the works of early Southern black creative writers did not reach a wide audience because they were privately printed or simply not considered worthy of note. Yet their contributions form an important part of the Southern literary heritage. Each of these writers is summarized in a brief biographical sketch that includes place of residence in the South, vocation/occupation, and identification by genre, as well as a listing of creative writings and publications in which they originally appeared. An insightful introduction perspective.
Greenwood
Title: Southern Black Creative Writers, 1829-1953
Description:
Some 230 writers are included, and for each the compiler has provided, in addition to a publication history, a brief summary of educational background, occupation, and honors and awards obtained.
The most important feature of any work of this kind is the careful selection of those names to be included.
Foster has chosen well.
.
.
.
Inclusion of lesser-known authors makes this volume useful.
Choice This new biobibliographical guide identifies known and little known Southern black writers to 1953, many of whom have received scant critical attention over the years.
A large number of the works of early Southern black creative writers did not reach a wide audience because they were privately printed or simply not considered worthy of note.
Yet their contributions form an important part of the Southern literary heritage.
Each of these writers is summarized in a brief biographical sketch that includes place of residence in the South, vocation/occupation, and identification by genre, as well as a listing of creative writings and publications in which they originally appeared.
An insightful introduction perspective.

Related Results

Helvete 3
Helvete 3
Not to be confused with metal studies, music criticism, ethnography, or sociology, Helvete: A Journal of Black Metal Theory is a speculative and creative endeavor, one which seeks ...
The Place and the Writer
The Place and the Writer
The combined experience of authors throughout the ages offers a wealth of valuable information about the practice of writing. However, such lore can also be problematic for student...
Saturday Night at the S Street Salon
Saturday Night at the S Street Salon
This chapter introduces one of the most understudied communities of New Negro writers. Commencing in the 1920s, African American writer Georgia Douglas Johnson invited writers to h...
Encyclopedia of Feminist Literature
Encyclopedia of Feminist Literature
Many women writers have secured a solid place in the literary canon, while others have remained marginalized. This reference includes alphabetically arranged entries on roughly 70 ...
Black Women Remember Black Girls
Black Women Remember Black Girls
This chapter shows how Black girlhood must be made—in SOLHOT the space of Black girlhood is made through time, a timing that is infused with the sacred and spirit. In SOLHOT, to “h...
Tom Petty’s Southern Accents
Tom Petty’s Southern Accents
By 1985 Tom Petty had already obtained legendary status. He had fame. He had money. But he was restless, hoping to stretch his artistry beyond the confining format of songs like “T...
Ordinary Violence and Creative Economy
Ordinary Violence and Creative Economy
In this chapter, the global creative economy discursive regime is shown to be a spatially-differentiated and power-laden practice. Analyzing the ways in which heritage, creative ec...
Tiara
Tiara
This chapter features a scene from a play entitled Endangered Black Girls (EBG), based on the lived experiences of Black girls the author has worked with in an after-school program...

Back to Top