Americans in the World War II era bought the novels of African
American writers in unprecedented numbers. But the names on the
books lining shelves and filling barracks trunks were not the
now-familiar Richard Wright and Ralph Ellison, but Frank Yerby,
Chester Himes, William Gardner Smith, and J. Saunders Redding.
In this book, Stephanie Brown recovers the work of these
innovative novelists, overturning conventional wisdom about the
writers of the period and the trajectory of African American
literary history. She also questions the assumptions about the
relations between race and genre that have obscured the importance
of these once-influential creators.
Wright's "Native Son" (1940) is typically considered to have
inaugurated an era of social realism in African-American
literature. And Ellison's "Invisible Man" (1952) has been cast as
both a high mark of American modernism and the only worthy stopover
on the way to the Black Arts Movement of the 1960s. But readers in
the late 1940s purchased enough copies of Yerby's historical
romances to make him the best-selling African American author of
all time. Critics, meanwhile, were taking note of the generic
experiments of Redding, Himes, and Smith, while the authors
themselves questioned the obligation of black authors to write
protest, instead penning campus novels, war novels, and, in Yerby's
case, "costume dramas." Their status as "lesser lights" is the
product of retrospective bias, Brown demonstrates, and their novels
established the period immediately following World War II as a
pivotal moment in the history of the African American novel.
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