Black Box

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Black Box

Writing the Race

Literary studies: c 1900 to c 2000 Literary studies: from c 2000 Social groups, communities and identities Social and cultural history

Author: Henry Louis Gates Jr.

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Language: English

Published by: Penguin

Published on: 19th March 2024

Format: LCP-protected ePub

ISBN: 9780241678527


Overview

A foundational reckoning with how Black Americans have used the written word to define and redefine themselves over the course of the country's history.

Distilled over many years from Henry Louis Gates Jr.'s legendary Harvard course in African American Studies, The Black Box: Writing the Race is the story of Black self-definition in America through the prism of the writers who have led the way. From Phillis Wheatley and Frederick Douglass, W. E. B. Du Bois and Booker T. Washington, to Zora Neale Hurston and Richard Wright, James Baldwin and Toni Morrison, these writers used words to create a liveable world – a “home” – for Black people destined to live in a bitterly racist society.

This is a community that defined and transformed itself in defiance of oppression and lies; a collective act of resistance and transcendence that is at the heart of its self-definition. Out of that contested ground has flowered a resilient, creative, powerful, diverse culture formed by people who have often disagreed markedly about what it means to be ''Black'', and about how best to shape a usable past out of the materials at hand, to call into being a more just and equitable future.

This is the epic story of how, through essays and speeches, novels, plays and poems, a long line of creative thinkers has unveiled the contours of – and resisted confinement in – the black box that this “nation within a nation” has been assigned, from its founding to today. It is a book that records the compelling saga of the creation of a people.

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