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Author Christian, Shawn Anthony, author

Title The Harlem Renaissance and the Idea of a New Negro Reader / Shawn Anthony Christian
Published Amherst : University of Massachusetts Press, 2016

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Description 1 online resource
Contents Introduction. The New Negro is reading -- Creating critical frameworks: three models for the New Negro Reader -- In search of Black writers (and readers): Crisis's and Opportunity's literary contests -- Beyond the New Negro: artistry, audience, and the Harlem Renaissance literary anthology -- Pedagogy for critical readership: James Weldon Johnson's English 123 -- Epilogue. On African American writers and readers
Summary "Many scholars have written about the white readers and patrons of the Harlem Renaissance, but during the period many black writers, publishers, and editors worked to foster a cadre of African American readers, or in the poet Sterling Brown's words, a "reading folk." Black newspapers featured columns that reviewed the latest African American fiction. Magazines held writing contests to urge black readers to participate in the literary culture. Through newspapers, journals, and anthologies, writers such as James Weldon Johnson, Jessie Fauset, and Gwendolyn Bennett spoke directly to their fellow African Americans to cultivate interest in literature and the intellectual tools for reading it. In The Harlem Renaissance and the Idea of a New Negro Reader, Shawn Anthony Christian argues that print-based addresses to African Americans are a defining but understudied component of the Harlem Renaissance. Especially between 1919 and 1930, these writers promoted diverse racial representation as a characteristic of "good literature" both to exhibit black literacy and to foster black readership. Drawing on research from print culture studies, histories of racial uplift, and studies of modernism, Christian demonstrates the importance of this focus on the African American reader in influential periodicals such as The Crisis and celebrated anthologies such as The New Negro. Christian illustrates that the drive to develop and support black readers was central in the poetry, fiction, and drama of the era."-- Provided by publisher
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Harlem Renaissance -- Social aspects
African Americans -- Books and reading -- United States
LITERARY CRITICISM -- Books & Reading.
African Americans -- Books and reading
African Americans in literature
American literature -- African American authors
Harlem Renaissance
Intellectual life
United States
New York (State) -- New York -- Harlem
Genre/Form Criticism, interpretation, etc.
History
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9781613764152
1613764154