Some of the best known African American poems are sonnets: Claude
McKay's "If We Must Die," Countee Cullen's "Yet Do I Marvel,"
Gwendolyn Brooks's "First fight. Then fiddle." Yet few readers realize
that these poems are part of a rich tradition that formed after the
Civil War and comprises more than a thousand sonnets by African
American poets. Paul Laurence Dunbar, Jean Toomer, Langston Hughes,
Margaret Walker, and Rita Dove all wrote sonnets.
Based on extensive archival research, _The African American Sonnet: A
Literary History_ traces this forgotten tradition from the nineteenth
century to the present. Timo Müller uses sonnets to open up fresh
perspectives on African American literary history. He examines the
struggle over the legacy of the Civil War, the trajectories of Harlem
Renaissance protest, the tensions between folk art and transnational
perspectives in the thirties, the vernacular modernism of the postwar
period, the cultural nationalism of the Black Arts movement, and
disruptive strategies of recent experimental poetry.
In this book, Müller examines the inventive strategies African
American poets devised to occupy and reshape a form overwhelmingly
associated with Europe. In the tightly circumscribed space of sonnets,
these poets mounted evocative challenges to the discursive and
material boundaries they confronted.
Les mer
A Literary History
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781496817846
Publisert
2018
Utgiver
University Press of Mississippi
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter