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Spoofing the Modern - Satire in the Harlem Renaissance (Hardcover)
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Spoofing the Modern - Satire in the Harlem Renaissance (Hardcover)
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Spoofing the Modern is the first book devoted solely to studying
the role satire played in the movement known as the "New Negro," or
Harlem, Renaissance from 1919 to 1940. As the first era in which
African American writers and artists enjoyed frequent access to and
publicity from major New York-based presses, the Harlem Renaissance
helped the talents, concerns, and criticisms of African Americans
to reach a wider audience in the 1920s and 1930s. These writers and
artists joined a growing chorus of modernity that frequently
resonated in the caustic timbre of biting satire and parody. The
Harlem Renaissance was simultaneously the first major African
American literary movement of the twentieth century and the first
major blooming of satire by African Americans. Such authors as
folklorist and anthropologist Zora Neale Hurston, poet Langston
Hughes, journalist George S. Schuyler, writer-editor-poet Wallace
Thurman, physician Rudolph Fisher, and artist Richard Bruce Nugent
found satire an attractive means to criticize not only American
racism, but also the trials of American culture careening toward
modernity. Frequently, they directed their satiric barbs toward
each other, lampooning the painful processes through which African
American artists struggled with modernity, often defined by fads
and superficial understandings of culture. Dickson-Carr argues that
these satirists provided the Harlem Renaissance with much of its
most incisive cultural criticism. The book opens by analyzing the
historical, political, and cultural circumstances that allowed for
the "New Negro" in general and African American satire in
particular to flourish in the 1920s. Each subsequent chapter then
introduces the major satirists within the larger movement by
placing each author's career in a broader cultural context,
including those authors who shared similar views. Spoofing the
Modern concludes with an overview that demonstrates how Harlem
Renaissance authors influenced later cultural and literary
movements.
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