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Going Through the Storm The Influence of African American Art in History

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ISBN-10: 019508604X

ISBN-13: 9780195086041

Edition: 1994

Authors: Sterling Stuckey

List price: $43.99
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Description:

Upon his arrival in the North, Frederick Douglass found, to his utter astonishment, "persons who could speak of the singing among slaves as the evidence of their contentment and happiness." As late as 1903, W.E.B. Du Bois observed that African American spirituals had led naive whites to believe that "life was joyous to the black slave, careless and happy." While these misconceptions have largely disappeared, the history of African American culture--and its importance to American history as a whole--is still a subject little understood by the majority of Americans. In Going through the Storm, Sterling Stuckey offers a compelling look at one of the world's richest cultural traditions. He…    
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Book details

List price: $43.99
Copyright year: 1994
Publisher: Oxford University Press, Incorporated
Publication date: 1/6/1994
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 320
Size: 6.06" wide x 9.17" long x 0.87" tall
Weight: 0.990
Language: English

Slavery, the Arts, and Resistance
Through the Prism of Folklore: The Black Ethos in Slavery
Remembering Denmark Vesey
"Ironic Tenacity": Frederick Douglass's Seizure of the Dialectic
The Skies of Consciousness: African Dance at Pinkster in New York, 1750-1840
Classical Black Nationalism
Classical Black Nationalist Thought
A Last Stern Struggle: Henry Highland Garnet and Liberation Theory
Black Americans and African Consciousness: Du Bois, Woodson, and the Spell of Africa
Poetry and the Novel
The Poetry of Sterling A. Brown
The Death of Benito Cereno: A Reading of Herman Melville on Slavery
"Follow Your Leader": The Theme of Cannibalism in Melville's Benito Cereno
The Arts, Cultural Theory, and History
"I Want to Be African": Paul Robeson and the Ends of Nationalist Theory and Practice, 1914-1945
Paul Robeson's Here I Stand
Toward a History of Blacks in North America
Going Through the Storm: The Great Singing Movements of the Sixties
Index