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Georgia Douglas Johnson (1877-1966) was the most prolific female
writer of the Harlem Renaissance. Born as Georgia Blanche Douglas
Camp in 1877 in Atlanta, Georgia, Johnson devoted much of her
artistic imagination to indexing African American women's interior
life and advancing the means through which to achieve interracial
cooperation. After a Thousand Tears represents the only extant
poetry collection that Johnson authored between 1928 and 1962, and
it illustrates her more nuanced and transgressive prescription for
gender, racial, and national advancement. Although scholars have
critically examined Johnson's four previously published collections
of poetry (The Heart of a Woman [1918], Bronze [1922], An Autumn
Love Cycle [1928], and Share My World [1962]), they have never
engaged After a Thousand Tears. Jimmy Worthy II located the
unpublished work while conducting archival research at Emory
University's Stuart A. Rose Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book
Library. Worthy discovered that while Johnson intended to publish
Tears with Padma Publications of Bombay in 1947, the project never
came to fruition. Published now, for the first time, this volume
features eighty-one poems that offer Johnson's intimate and
forthright sensibility toward African American women's lived
experiences during and following the Harlem Renaissance.
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