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Tuneful Tales (Paperback)
Loot Price: R326
Discovery Miles 3 260
You Save: R58
(15%)
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Tuneful Tales (Paperback)
Series: Double Mountain Books Series
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List price R384
Loot Price R326
Discovery Miles 3 260
You Save R58 (15%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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As enigmatic and contradictory as far West Texas has always been,
it is nevertheless surprising to learn that in 1925 its desert
germinated a slender but vibrant shoot of the Harlem Renaissance.
Isolated on the U.S.-Mexico border, far from any metropolitan
African-American community or literary influences, Bernice Love
Wiggins, a perceptive young poet, self-published her first,
apparently only, book of poetry. One of only a handful of black
writers in Texas in the 1920s and 1930s, Wiggins was contemporary
with Langston Hughes, Countee Cullen, and Zora Neale Hurston and
was among the first female African-American poets published in the
United States. Just as the Harlem movement focused on experiences
of black Americans who sought relief from racism and endeavored to
build communities, Tuneful Tales gives voice to the many-sided
black experience in remote El Paso. Whatever Wiggins may have known
of her contemporaries more than half a continent away or of the
movement itself may never be clear. Disappointingly, after her move
to California in the early 1930s, the trail grows cold. Yet the
composed young woman who gazes so wisely, if dreamily, from her
high school photographs evoked her personae so compellingly in both
timbre and substance that great folklorist and critic J. Mason
Brewer proclaimed her the female Paul Laurence Dunbar. Ethiopia
Speaks Lynched Somewhere in the South, the "Land of the Free," To a
very strong branch of a dogwood tree. Lynched One of my sons, --
When the flag was in danger they answered the call I gave them
black sons, ah yes, gave them all When you came to me. And Now
Goodnight I have told you tuneful tales, Gathered from the hills
and vales, Wheresoever mine own people chanced to dwell. If the
tales have brought you mirth, Brought more laughter to the earth,
It is well. Maceo Dailey is the director of the African American
Studies Program of the University of Texas El Paso and a governor's
appointee to the Texas Council For The Humanities and Juneteenth
Commission.
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