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Writing the Harlem Renaissance: Revisiting the Vision

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Writing the Harlem Renaissance: Revisiting the Vision

Contributors:

By (Author) Emily Allen Williams
Contributions by Mary Lynn Chamber
Contributions by Gerardo Del Guercio
Contributions by Antonia Iliadou
Contributions by Jacqueline C. Jones
Contributions by Devona Mallory
Contributions by Reginald Martin
Contributions by Imani Michelle Scott
Contributions by Christopher Varlack

ISBN:

9780739196809

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Lexington Books

Publication Date:

26th April 2017

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Professional and Scholarly

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Dewey:

810.98960730

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

140

Dimensions:

Width 159mm, Height 237mm, Spine 15mm

Weight:

358g

Description

The contributors in this study examine the historical Harlem community during its renaissance period as well as its present-day community. A cursory investigation of the existent that focus on the Harlem community during its renaissance of the early twentieth century reveals that the compilations are primarily ones that present the subjects life stories through the lens of praise songs. This book, however, presents the Harlem community through a lens that reveals more grounded and researched analyses that bring the influences and contributions of the Harlem Renaissance to a level of relevance in the twenty-first century from one or more critical vantage points. This study aims to move beyond the more obvious and foregrounded artistic contributions towards analyses of the Harlem Renaissance alongside analyses of a twenty-first century Harlem community and its present day contributions.

Reviews

Emily Allen Williamss Writing the Harlem Renaissance: Revisiting the Vision offers a richly informed exploration of the contemporary and historical significance of the Harlem Renaissance. The contributors fresh excavations of this site of cultural flowering probe its wider intellectual, aesthetic, and humanistic scope. Their research turns attention to the movements diverse range of social, cultural, philosophical, and political interests that continue to elicit discerning scholarly insights. The book is most timely, moreover, as a centennial commemoration and revaluation of the legacy and continued promise of New Negro art. The illuminating perspectives from which the movement is reassessed include journalism, sociopolitical theory, sociology, philosophy, aesthetics, and politics, thereby validating Williamss perception of the Harlem Renaissance as a multivocal venture that holds vital significance for a global array of creators and thinkers. These new excavations emphasize the literatures capacity to speak beyond the mystical theoretical imaginings often identified with the aesthetic outpouring of the movement. The volume positions the literature at an enlightening philosophical juncture where architects of culture and society are emboldened to unroll the past, thus to understand the present, and move meaningfully into the future. -- Paul Griffith, Texas Southern University
Predicated on our continuing need to identify and test interdisciplinary forms of inquiry regarding the literary and cultural histories of the United States, the seven essays in this collection invite scholars to take new and rigorous directions in the construction of knowledge. The nature, scope, and contours of the Harlem Renaissance are so richly indeterminate that it is essential to scrutinize existing critical stances and to supplement them with fresh perspectives. Guided by Emily Allen Williams' perspicacious vision, the essayists produce challenging arguments about the concept and continuing relevance of modernism. They urge us to embrace larger visions about such issues as gender identities, the critical role of journalism, the evolution of voice within a tradition of poetry, and the contested spaces of representation and performance where ethical and moral problems abound. In this sense, Writing the Harlem Renaissance is a genuine contribution to the dynamics of contemporary literary and cultural scholarship. -- Jerry W. Ward Jr., Central China Normal University
Thankfully, Writing the Harlem Renaissance: Revisiting the Vision is the realization of a dream delayed, not ultimately deferred. Through this text, Emily Allen Williams shepherds to publication courageous contemporary analyses of Harlem, its Renaissance, and its multiple legacies. The works of iconic Harlem Renaissance writersToomer, DuBois, Fauset, Hurston, Hughes, and othersare still represented here, but with critiques, appreciations, and contexts from a new configuration of literary scholars. Therein is the beauty of the collection and the reason why, in Williamss words, it flies. -- Maureen Elgersman Lee, Hampton University
In Writing the Harlem Renaissance: Revisiting the Vision, Emily Allen Williams places her fingers on the pulse of the Harlem Renaissance and invites readers to see that the conversations surrounding this period are far from over. Moving the needle beyond conventional dogma and theory, Williams and her contributors take on mainstream currents of critical thinking on the Harlem Renaissance without apology. The book is an engaging read for scholars and students of the period who are seeking new perspectives on this artistic period as they read again the words of those who lived through it. -- Derrilyn E. Morrison, Middle Georgia State University

Author Bio

Emily Allen Williams is dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences at the University of the Virgin Islands.

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