"Bruce Grit will prove extremely valuable to scholars who do not
have access to the Schomburg's Bruce collection or the time
necessary for the daunting task of sifting through its contents."
--African American Review
John Edward Bruce (1856-1924) witnessed the dying days of American
slavery, the turbulence of the Civil War and Reconstruction, the
rise of Jim Crow, and the development of American imperialism. As a
journalist, historian, and bibliophile, he was a major figure in
African American history and politics during his lifetime. In this
first intellectual biography of Bruce--a prolific writer and
correspondent who published most frequently under the name Bruce
Grit--William Seraile explores Bruce's tireless advocacy on behalf
of African peoples everywhere, particularly in the United
States.
William Seraile traces Bruce's shifting strategies and tactics and
his alliances with famous contemporaries such as Arthur A.
Schomburg, Carter G. Woodson, Booker T. Washington, and Marcus
Garvey. He argues that underlying all of Bruce's work was what
would become his greatest legacy: his promotion of history and
culture of African people in the diaspora as valuable fields of
study.
William Seraile is professor emeritus of Lehman College. He is the
author of Voice of Dissent: Theophilus Gould Steward and Black
America, Fire in His Heart: Bishop Benjamin Tucker Tanner and the
A.M.E. Church, and New York's Black Regiments During the Civil
War.
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