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Furious Flower: Seeding the Future of African American Poetry is an
anthology of poems by more than a hundred award-winning poets,
including Jericho Brown, Tracy K. Smith, and Justin Philip Reed,
combined with themed essays on poetics from celebrated scholars
such as Kwame Dawes, Evie Shockley, and Meta DuEwa Jones. The
Furious Flower Poetry Center is the nation's first academic center
for Black poetry. In this eponymous collection, editors Joanne V.
Gabbin and Lauren K. Alleyne bring together many of the paramount
voices in Black poetry and poetics active today, composing an
electrifying mosaic of voices, generations, and aesthetics that
reveals the Black narrative in the work of twentieth- and
twenty-first-century writers. Intellectually enlightening and
powerfully enlivening, Furious Flower explores and celebrates the
idea of the Black poetic voice, to ask, "What's next for Black
poetic expression?
First published anonymously in 1912, this resolutely unsentimental
novel gave many white readers their first glimpse of the double
standards - and double consciousness - experienced by Black people
in modern America. Republished in 1927, at the height of the Harlem
Renaissance, with an introduction by Carl Van Vechten, The
Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man became a pioneering document of
African-American culture and an eloquent model for later novelists
ranging from Zora Neale Hurston to Richard Wright and Ralph
Ellison. Narrated by a man whose light skin enables him to 'pass'
for white, the novel describes a journey through the strata of
Black society at the turn of the century - from a cigar factory in
Jacksonville to an elite gambling club in New York, from genteel
aristocrats to the musicians who hammered out the rhythms of
Ragtime. The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man is a complex and
moving examination of the question of race and an unsparing look at
what it meant to forge an identity as a man in a culture that
recognized nothing but colour.
From Epicurus to Sam Cook, the Daily News to Roots, Digest draws
from the present and the past to form an intellectual, American
identity. In poems that forge their own styles and strategies, we
experience dialogues between the written word and other art forms.
Within this dialogue we hear Ben Jonson, we meet police K-9s, and
we find children negotiating a sense of the world through a
father's eyes and through their own.
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