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FROM THE PULITZER PRIZE-WINNING CRITIC AND ACCLAIMED AUTHOR OF
NEGROLAND Shortlisted for the Gordon Burn Prize 2022 'This is one
of the most imaginative - and therefore moving - memoirs I have
ever read' - Vivian Gornick, author of Fierce Attachments Margo
Jefferson boldly and brilliantly fuses cultural analysis and memoir
to probe race, class, family and art. Taking in the jazz and blues
icons whom Jefferson idolised as a child in the 1950s, ideas of
what the female body could be - as incarnated by trailblazing Black
dancers and athletes - Harriet Beecher Stowe's Topsy reimagined in
the artworks of Kara Walker, white supremacy in the novels of Willa
Cather, and more, this breathtakingly eloquent account is both a
critique and a vindication of the constructed self. 'Margo
Jefferson's Constructing a Nervous System is as electric as its
title suggests. It takes vital risks, tosses away rungs of the
ladder as it climbs, and offers an indispensable, rollicking
account of the enchantments, pleasures, costs, and complexities of
"imagin[ing] and interpret[ing] what had not imagined you' - Maggie
Nelson, author of The Argonauts 'If you want to know who we are and
where we've been, read Margo Jefferson' - Edmund White, author of A
Previous Life 'This is a moving portrait of the life of a brilliant
African American woman's mind. Margo Jefferson is so real, her
sensibility so literary, her learning such a joy. The gifts of
reading her are many' - Darryl Pinckney, author of Sold and Gone
The stunning only novel by the celebrated poet and first Black
author to win a Pulitzer Prize, introduced by Margo Jefferson.
'Such a wonderful book. Utterly unique, exquisitely crafted and
quietly powerful. I loved it and want everyone to read this lost
literary treasure.' Bernardine Evaristo 'Maud Martha finds beauty
in the brutal formative moments that make us. It is one of my
favorite depictions of how a woman comes to trust her eyes.' Raven
Leilani 'The quotidian rises to an exquisite portraiture of black
womanhood in the hands of one of America's most foundational
writers.' Claudia Rankine 'Maud Martha reveals the poetry, power
and splendor of an ordinary life.' Tayari Jones What, what, am I to
do with all of this life? Maud Martha Brown is a little girl
growing up on the South Side of 1940s Chicago. Amidst the crumbling
taverns and overgrown yards, she dreams: of New York, romance, her
future. She admires dandelions, learns to drink coffee, falls in
love, decorates her kitchenette, visits the Jungly Hovel, guts a
chicken, buys hats, gives birth. But her lighter-skinned husband
has dreams too: of the Foxy Cats Club, other women, war. And the
'scraps of baffled hate' - a certain word from a saleswoman; that
visit to the cinema; the cruelty of a department store Santa Claus-
are always there . Written in 1953 but never published in Britain,
Maud Martha is a poetic collage of happenings that forms an
extraordinary portrait of an ordinary life: one lived with wisdom,
humour, protest, rage, dignity, and joy.
Michael Jackson: provocateur, icon, enigma. Who was he really? And how does his spectacular rise, his catastrophic fall, reflect upon those who made him; those who broke him; and those who loved him?
Almost ten years on from Jackson's untimely death, here is Margo Jefferson's definitive and dazzling dissection of the King of Pop: a man admired for his music, his flair, his performances; and censured for his skin, his erratic behaviour, and, in his final years, for his relationships with children.
The daughter of a successful paediatrician and a fashionable
socialite, Margo Jefferson spent her childhood among Chicago's
black elite. She calls this society 'Negroland': 'a small region of
Negro America where residents were sheltered by a certain amount of
privilege and plenty'. With privilege came expectation. Reckoning
with the strictures and demands of Negroland at crucial historical
moments - the civil rights movement, the dawn of feminism, the
fallacy of post-racial America - Jefferson brilliantly charts the
twists and turns of a life informed by psychological and moral
contradictions.
Taking in the jazz and blues icons whom Jefferson idolised as a
child in the 1950s, ideas of what the female body could be - as
incarnated by trailblazing Black dancers and athletes - Harriet
Beecher Stowe's Topsy reimagined in the artworks of Kara Walker,
white supremacy in the novels of Willa Cather, and more, this
breathtakingly eloquent account is both a critique and a
vindication of the constructed self.
FROM THE PULITZER PRIZE-WINNING CRITIC AND ACCLAIMED AUTHOR OF
NEGROLAND Shortlisted for the Gordon Burn Prize 2022 'This is one
of the most imaginative - and therefore moving - memoirs I have
ever read' - Vivian Gornick, author of Fierce Attachments Margo
Jefferson boldly and brilliantly fuses cultural analysis and memoir
to probe race, class, family and art. Taking in the jazz and blues
icons whom Jefferson idolised as a child in the 1950s, ideas of
what the female body could be - as incarnated by trailblazing Black
dancers and athletes - Harriet Beecher Stowe's Topsy reimagined in
the artworks of Kara Walker, white supremacy in the novels of Willa
Cather, and more, this breathtakingly eloquent account is both a
critique and a vindication of the constructed self. 'Margo
Jefferson's Constructing a Nervous System is as electric as its
title suggests. It takes vital risks, tosses away rungs of the
ladder as it climbs, and offers an indispensable, rollicking
account of the enchantments, pleasures, costs, and complexities of
"imagin[ing] and interpret[ing] what had not imagined you' - Maggie
Nelson, author of The Argonauts 'If you want to know who we are and
where we've been, read Margo Jefferson' - Edmund White, author of A
Previous Life 'This is a moving portrait of the life of a brilliant
African American woman's mind. Margo Jefferson is so real, her
sensibility so literary, her learning such a joy. The gifts of
reading her are many' - Darryl Pinckney, author of Sold and Gone
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