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Messenger Reader Stories, Poetry, and Essays from the Messenger Magazine

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ISBN-10: 037575539X

ISBN-13: 9780375755392

Edition: 2000

Authors: Sondra Kathryn Wilson, Paul Robeson, Zora Neale Hurston, Wallace Thurman, Dorothy West

List price: $23.00
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Description:

The Messenger was the third most popular magazine of the Harlem Renaissance after The Crisis andOpportunity. Unlike the other two magazines, The Messenger was not tied to a civil rights organization. Labor activist A. Philip Randolph and economist Chandler Owen started the magazine in 1917 to advance the cause of socialism to the black masses. They believed that a socialist society was the only one that would be free from racism. The socialist ideology of The Messenger "the only magazine of scientific radicalism in the world published by Negroes," was reflected in the pieces and authors published in its pages. The Messenger Reader contains poetry, stories, and essays from Paul Robeson,…    
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Book details

List price: $23.00
Copyright year: 2000
Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
Publication date: 2/8/2000
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 448
Size: 5.59" wide x 8.58" long x 1.06" tall
Weight: 1.210

Sondra Kathryn Wilson is the literary executor of James Weldon Johnson & the editor of "The Crisis Reader," "The Opportunity Reader," & "The Messenger Reader." She lives in Oak Bluffs, Massachusetts.

Zora Neale Hurston was born in 1901 in Eatonville, Fla. She left home at the age of 17, finished high school in Baltimore, and went on to study at Howard University, Barnard College, and Columbia University before becoming one of the most prolific writers in the Harlem Renaissance. Her works included novels, essays, plays, and studies in folklore and anthropology. Her most productive years were the 1930s and early 1940s. It was during those years that she wrote her autobiography Dust Tracks on a Road, worked with the Federal Writers Project in Florida, received a Guggenheim fellowship, and wrote four novels. She is most remembered for her novel Their Eyes Were Watching God, published in…    

Acknowledgment
Introduction
Song
Woodnote
Pagan Prayer
To Miss Harriet E. Riggs
Her Thirteen Black Soldiers
Too Much Religion
The Bursting of the Chrysalis
Here and Hereafter
Love's Unchangeableness
The Voice of the Wilderness
Credo
Where Air of Freedom Is
Ruthlessville
The Song of Psyche
The Song
Dreams Are the Workman's Friends
My Motive
Countee Cullen
Sphinxes
That Poison, Late Sleep
Grant Park
Gods
Prayer for a Winter Night
Minnie Sings Her Blues
Formula
Poem for Youth
The Naughty Child
Desire
To Love
Africa
Your Voice Keeps Ringing Down the Day
Paradox
Romance
Promise
Toy
Prejudice
Crucifixion
Appassionata
Disenthralment
Loss
Karma
Fiat Lux
Love in Midsummer
Variations on a Black Theme
If We Must Die
Labor's Day
Birds of Prey
Query
Up, Sons of Freedom!
Confession
The Unquenchable Fire
Silk Stockings
The Young Glory of Him
Bodies in the Moonlight
The Little Virgin
The Eatonville Anthology
Seven Years for Rachel
A Deserter from Armageddon
Brief Biography of Fletcher J. Mosely
The Bird in the Bush
The Golden Penknife
The Spring of '65
Snakes
Hannah Byde
The Yellow Peril: A One-Act Play
At the Coffee House
Shoddyism Called History
Phases of Du Bois
The Brass Check: A Review
The Book of American Negro Poetry
Harlem Shadows
Chords and Dischords
Certain People of Importance
Fire in the Flint
A Stranger at the Gates: A Review of Nigger Heaven
A Thrush at Eve with an Atavistic Wound
Black Harvest
The Weary Blues
Porgy
All God's Chillun' Still Got Wings
Reflections of An Alleged Dramatic Critic
My Red Rag
Colored Authors and Their Contributions to the World's Literature
The Black City
Art and Propaganda
Old School of Negro "Critics" Hard on Paul Laurence Dunbar
Propaganda in the Theatre
Same Old Blues
An Actor's Wanderings and Hopes
The Black and Tan Cabaret - America's Most Democratic Institution
Survey of Negro Literature, 1760-1926
Who Is the New Negro, and Why?
The Failure of Negro Leadership
Du Bois on Revolution
A Voice from the Dead!
Black Mammies
Socialism the Negroes' Hope
"If We Must Die"
The Negro in Politics
Reply to Marcus Garvey
The West Indies: Their Political, Social, and Economic Condition
Economics and Politics
The Business Side of a University
The Hue and Cry about Howard University
In the Name of Purity
Quoth Brigham Young - This Is the Place
Women's Most Serious Problem
Biographical Notes of Contributors
Bibliography