The Muse in Bronzeville The Muse in Bronzeville

The Muse in Bronzeville

African American Creative Expression in Chicago, 1932-1950

    • $22.99
    • $22.99

Publisher Description

The Muse in Bronzeville, a dynamic reappraisal of a neglected period in African American cultural history, is the first comprehensive critical study of the creative awakening that occurred on Chicago's South Side from the early 1930s to the cold war. Coming of age during the hard Depression years and in the wake of the Great Migration, this generation of Black creative artists produced works of literature, music, and visual art fully comparable in distinction and scope to the achievements of the Harlem Renaissance.

This highly informative and accessible work, enhanced with reproductions of paintings of the same period, examines Black Chicago's "Renaissance" through richly anecdotal profiles of such figures as Richard Wright, Gwendolyn Brooks, Margaret Walker, Charles White, Gordon Parks, Horace Cayton, Muddy Waters, Mahalia Jackson, and Katherine Dunham. Robert Bone and Richard A. Courage make a powerful case for moving Chicago's Bronzeville, long overshadowed by New York's Harlem, from a peripheral to a central position within African American and American studies.

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
2011
September 27
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
336
Pages
PUBLISHER
Rutgers University Press
SELLER
Rutgers University Press
SIZE
10.3
MB

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