INTRODUCTION Oxford dictionary had defines African American as a person from America who is a member of a race of people who have dark skin, originally from Africa. Therefore African American literature is a literature written by a person from America who is a member of a race of people who have dark skin, originally from Africa.
INTRODUCTION
Oxford
dictionary had defines African American as a person from America who is a
member of a race of people who have dark skin, originally from Africa.
Therefore African American literature is a literature written by a person from
America who is a member of a race of people who have dark skin, originally from
Africa.
Gilyard, K., and A. Wardi defined African American literature as
writings by people of African descent living in the United States of America.
However, just as African American history and life is extremely varied, so too
is African American literature. Nonetheless, African American literature has
generally focused on themes of particular interest to Black people in the
United States, such as the role of African Americans within the larger American
society and what it means to be an American. African American
Literature explores the issues of freedom and equality which were long denied
to Black people in the United States, along with further themes such as African
American culture, racism, religion, slavery and a sense of home, among
others.
African American literature constitutes a vital branch of the
literature of the African Diasporas, and African American literature has both
influenced by the great African Diaspora’s heritage and in turn influenced
African Diaspora’s writings in many countries. African American literature
exists within the larger realm of post-colonial literature, even though
scholars draw a distinctive line between the two by stating that "African
American literature differs from most post-colonial literature in that it is
written by members of a minority community who reside within a nation of vast
wealth and economic power."
African American oral culture is rich in poetry including; spirituals,
African American gospel music, blues and rap. This oral poetry also shows
up in the African American tradition of Christian sermons, which make use of
deliberate repetition, cadence and alliteration. African American literature
especially written poetry, but also prose has a strong tradition of
incorporating all of these forms of oral poetry.
However,
while these characteristics and themes exist on many levels of African American
literature, they are not the exclusive definition of the genre and don't exist
within all works within the genre. There is resistance to using Western
literary theory to analyze African American literature as Henry Louis Gates, Jr one of the most
important African American literary scholars, he said, "My desire has been
to allow the black tradition to speak for itself about its nature and various
functions, rather than to read it, or analyze it, in terms of literary theories
borrowed whole from other traditions, appropriated from without history ̏.
According to Gates, H African American literature is
the body of literature produced in the United States by writers of
African descent. The genre traces its origins to the works of such late
eighteenth century writers as; Phillis Wheatley and Olaudah Equiano, reaching
early high points with slave narratives and the Harlem Renaissance, and
continuing today with authors such as; Toni Morrison, Maya Angelou and
Walter Mosley. Among the themes and issues explored in African American
literature are the role of African Americans within the larger American
society, African-American culture racism, slavery and equality.
As African Americans place
in American society has changed over the centuries so to have the force of
African American literature. Before the American Civil War, African American
literature primarily focused on the issue of slavery, as indicated by the
subgenre of slave narratives. At the turn of the twentieth century, books by
authors such as W.E.B Du Bois and
Booker T. Washington debated whether to confront or appease racist attitudes in
the United States. During the American Civil Rights movement, authors such as
Richard Wright and Gwendolyn Brooks wrote about issues of racial segregation
and Black Nationalism. Today, African American literature has become accepted
as an integral part of American literature, with books such as;, The Color Purple by Alice
Walker, and Beloved by Toni Morrison, The Saga of an
American Family by Alex Haley achieving both best selling and
award winning status.
Therefore the
following are the trends featuring the growth of African American literature;
Early African American literature; this just as African
American history predates the emergence of the United States as an
independent country, so too does African American literature have similarly
deep roots. Lucy Terry is the author of the oldest known ˝as piece of African American literature ̏ also the poem known as
"Bars Fight" although this poem was not published until 1855 in
Josiah Holland's "History of Western Massachusetts." Other early
works include Briton Hammon's "The
Narrative of the Uncommon Sufferings and Surprising Deliverance of Briton
Hammon, A Negro Man, published his book known as; Poems on Various
Subjects in 1773, three years before American independence. ".
Poet Phillis Wheatley Born in Senegal-Africa Wheatley was captured and
sold into slavery at the age of seven. Then she brought to America, she
was owned by a Boston merchant. Even though she initially spoke no English, by
the time she was sixteen she had mastered the language. Her poetry was praised
by many of the leading figures of the American Revolution including; George
Washington, who personally thanked her for a poem she wrote in his honor.
Still, many white people found it hard to believe that a Black woman could be
intelligent enough to write poetry. As a consequence, Wheatley had to
defend herself in court by proving she actually wrote her own poetry. Some
critics cite Wheatley's successful defense as the first recognition of African
American literature. Another early African American author was Jupiter Hammon
(1711–1806). Hammon, considered the first published Black writer in America,
published his poem "An Evening Thought: Salvation by Christ with Penitential
Cries" as a broadside in early 1761. In 1778, he wrote an ode to
Phillis Wheatley, in which he discussed their shared humanity and common bonds.
In 1786, Hammon gave his well-known Address to the Negroes of the State of New
York. Hammon wrote the speech at age seventy-six after a lifetime of slavery and
it contains his famous quote, "If we should ever get to Heaven, we shall
find nobody to reproach us for being black, or for being slaves." Hammon's
speech also promoted the idea of a gradual emancipation as a way of ending
slavery. Hammon's caution may have stemmed from concern that slavery was
so entrenched in American society that an immediate emancipation of all slaves
would be difficult to achieve. Hammon apparently remained a slave until his death
Slave narratives; this is a subgenre of African
American literature which began in the middle of the 19th century is the slave
narrative. At the time, the controversy over slavery led to
impassioned literature on both sides of the issue, with books like; Harriet Beecher Stowes, Uncle Tom's
Cabin (1852) representing the abolitionist view of the evils of
slavery, while the so called Anti-Tom literature by white, southern writers
like William Gilmore Simms represented the pro-slavery viewpoint. To represent
the African American perspective of slavery, a number of former slaves such
as Harriet Jacobs and Frederick Douglass wrote slave narratives,
which soon became a mainstay of African American literature. Some six thousand
former slaves from North America and the Carribbean wrote accounts of
their lives, with about 150 of these published as separate books or pamphlets.
Therefore Slave
narratives can be broadly categorized into three distinct forms: Tales of
religious redemption, tales to inspire the abolitionist struggle, and tales of
progress. The tales written to inspire the abolitionist struggle are the most
famous because they tend to have a strong autobiographical motif. Many of them
are now recognized as the most literary of all nineteenth century writings by
African Americans; two of the best-known narratives include Frederick
Douglass's autobiography and Incidents
in the Life of a Slave Girl by Harriet Jacobs (1861).
Post-slavery era; Jay, G explained that
after the end of slavery and the American Civil War, a number of African
American authors continued to write nonfiction works about the condition of
African Americans in the country. Among the most prominent of these
writers is W. E. B. Du Bois (1868–1963), one of the original founders of
the NAACP. At the turn of the century, Du Bois published a highly
influential collection of essays titled "The Souls of Black Folk." The
book's essays on race were groundbreaking, drawing from Du Bois's personal
experiences to describe how African Americans lived in American society. The
book contains Du Bois's famous quote: "The problem of the twentieth
century is the problem of the color-line." Du Bois believed that African Americans
should, because of their common interests, work together to battle prejudice
and inequity. Another prominent author of this time period is Booker T.
Washington (1856–1915), who in many ways represented opposite views from
Du Bois. Washington was an educator and the founder of the Tuskegee Institute,
a Black college in Alabama. Among his published works are Up from
Slavery (1901), The Future of the American Negro (1899), Tuskegee
and Its People (1905), and My Larger Education (1911).
In contrast to Du Bois, who adopted a more confrontational attitude toward
ending racial strife in America, Washington believed that Blacks should first
lift themselves up and prove themselves the equal of whites before asking for an
end to racism. While this viewpoint was popular among some Blacks (and many
whites) at the time, Washington's political views would later fall out of
fashion. A third writer who gained attention during this period in the U.S.
though not a U.S. citizen, was the Jamaican Marcus Garvey (1887–1940),
a newspaper publisher, journalist, and crusader for Pan Africanism through his
organization, the Universal Negro Improvement Association and African
Communities League (UNIA).
Harlem Renaissance; the Harlem Renaissance from 1920 to 1940
brought new attention to African American literature. While the Harlem
Renaissance, based in the African American community in Harlem in New York City,
existed as a larger flowering of social thought and culture with numerous Black
artists, musicians, and others producing classic works in fields from jazz to
theater the renaissance is perhaps best known for its literary output. Langston
Hughes, photographed by Carl Van Vechten 1936. Among the most famous
writers of the renaissance is poet Langston Hughes, He first received attention
in the 1922 poetry collection, The Book of American Negro Poetry.
This book, edited by James Weldon Johnson, featured the work of the period's
most talented poets (including, among others, Claude McKay, who also published
three novels, Home to Harlem, Banjo, and Banana
Bottom, and a collection of short stories). In 1926, Hughes published
a collection of poetry, The Weary Blues, and in 1930 a
novel, Not without Laughter. Perhaps, Hughes' most famous poem is
"The Negro Speaks of Rivers," which he wrote as a young teen. His
single, most recognized character is Jesse B. Simple, a plainspoken, pragmatic
Harlemite whose comedic observations appeared in Hughes's columns for the Chicago
Defender and the New York Post. Simple Speaks His
Mind (1950) is, perhaps, the best-known collection of Simple stories
published in book form. Until his death in 1967, Hughes published nine volumes
of poetry, eight books of short stories, two novels, and a number of
plays, children's books, and translations. Another famous writer of the
renaissance is novelist Zora Neale Hurston, author of the classic
novel, Their Eyes Were Watching God (1937). Altogether,
Hurston wrote fourteen books which ranged from anthropology to short
stories to novel-length fiction. Because of Hurston's gender and the fact that
her work was not seen as socially or politically relevant, her writings fell
into obscurity for decades. Hurston's work was rediscovered in the 1970s, in a
famous essay by Alice Walker, who found in Hurston a role model for all female
African American writers. While Hurston and Hughes are the two most
influential writers to come out of the Harlem Renaissance, a number of other
writers also became well known during this period. They include Jean Toomer,
who wrote Cane, a famous collection of stories, poems, and
sketches about rural and urban Black life, and Dorothy West, author of the
novel The Living is Easy, which examined the life of an
upper-class Black family. Another popular renaissance writer is Countee Cullen,
who described everyday black life in his poems (such as a trip he made to
Baltimore, which was ruined by a racial insult). Cullen's books include the
poetry collections Color (1925), Copper Sun (1927),
and The Ballad of the Brown Girl (1927). Frank Marshall
Davis's poetry collections Black Man's Verse (1935) and I
am the American Negro (1937), published by Black Cat Press, and earned
him critical acclaim. Author Wallace Thurman also made an impact with his
novel The Blacker the Berry: A Novel of Negro Life (1929),
which focused on intraracial prejudice between lighter-skinned and
darker-skinned African Americans. The Harlem Renaissance marked a
turning point for African American literature. Prior to this time, books by
African Americans were primarily read by other Black people. With the
renaissance, though, African American literature as well as black fine art and
performance art began to be absorbed into mainstream American culture.
Civil Rights Movement era; A large migration of
African Americans began during the first word war hitting its high point
during the Second World War. During this Great Migration, Black people
left the racism and lack of opportunities in the American South and settled in
northern cities like; Chicago, where they found work in factories and other
sectors of the economy. Richard Wright, photographed by Carl Van
Vechten, 1939 this migration produced a new sense of independence in the
Black community and contributed to the vibrant Black urban culture seen during
the Harlem Renaissance. The migration also empowered the growing American Civil
Rights movement, which made a powerful impression on Black writers during the
1940, 1950 and 1960s. Just as Black activists were pushing to end segregation
and racism and create a new sense of Black Nationalism, so too were Black
authors attempting to address these issues with their writings. One of
the first writers to do so was James Baldwin, whose work addressed issues
of race and sexuality. Baldwin, who is best known for his novel Go Tell
It on the Mountain, wrote deeply personal stories and essays while
examining what were like to be both Black and homosexual at a time when neither
of these identities was accepted by American culture. In all, Baldwin wrote
nearly twenty books, including such classics as Another Country and The
Fire Next Time. Baldwin's idol and friend was author Richard Wright,
whom Baldwin called "the greatest Black writer in the world for me."
Wright is best known for his novel, Native Son (1940), which
tells the story of Bigger Thomas, a Black man struggling for acceptance in
Chicago. Baldwin was so impressed by the novel that he titled a collection of
his own essays Notes of a Native Son, in reference to Wright's
novel. However, their friendship fell apart due to one of the book's essays,
"Everybody's Protest Novel," which criticized Native Son for
lacking credible characters and psychological complexity. Among Wright's other
books are the autobiographical novel Black Boy (1945), The
Outsider (1953), and White Man, Listen! (1957). The
other great novelist of this period is Ralph Ellison, best known for his
novel Invisible Man (1952), which won the National Book Award
in 1953. Even though Ellison did not complete another novel during his
lifetime, Invisible Man was so influential that it secured his
place in literary history. After Ellison's death in 1994, a second novel, Juneteenth (1999),
was pieced together from the 2,000-plus pages he had written over 40 years. A
fuller version of the manuscript was published as Three Days before the
Shooting (2008). Ralph
Ellison circa 1961, The Civil Rights time period also saw the rise of
female Black poets, most notably Gwendolyn Brooks, who became the first African
American to win the Pulitzer Prize, which was awarded for her 1949 book of
poetry, Annie Allen. Along with Brooks, other female poets who
became well known during the 1950s and 60s are Nikki Giovanni and Sonia
Sanchez. During this time, a number of playwrights also came to national
attention, notably Lorraine Hansberry, whose play A Raisin in the Sun focuses
on a poor Black family living in Chicago. The play won the 1959 New York Drama
Critics' Circle Award. Another playwright who gained attention was Amiri
Baraka, who wrote controversial off-Broadway plays. In more recent years,
Baraka has become known for his poetry and music criticism. It is also
worth noting that a number of important essays and books about human rights
were written by the leaders of the Civil Rights Movement. One of the leading
examples of these is Martin Luther King. Jr "Letter from Birmingham
Jail."
Recent history; this is during the 1970s, African American
literature reached the mainstream as books by Black writers continually
achieved best-selling and award-winning status. This was also the time when the
work of African American writers began to be accepted by academia as a
legitimate genre of American literature.
As part of the larger Black Arts Movement, which was inspired by the
Civil Rights and Black Power Movements, African American literature began to be
defined and analyzed. A number of scholars and writers are generally credited
with helping to promote and define African American literature as a genre
during this time period, including fiction writers Toni Morrison and Alice
Walker and poet James Emanuel. Hence James Emanuel took a major step toward
defining African American literature when he edited (with Theodore Gross) Dark
Symphony: Negro Literature in America, the first collection of black
writings released by a major publisher. This anthology, and Emanuel's work
as an educator at the City College of New York (where he is credited with
introducing the study of African American poetry), heavily influenced the birth
of the genre. Other influential African American anthologies of this time
included Black Fire: An Anthology of Afro-American Writing, edited
by LeRoi Jones (now known as Amiri Baraka) and Larry Neal in 1968 and The
Negro Caravan, co-edited by Sterling Brown, Arthur P. Davis, and
Ulysses Lee in 1969. Toni Morrison, meanwhile, helped
promote Black literature and authors when she worked as an editor for Random
House in the 1960s and 1970s, where she edited books by such authors as Toni
Cade Bambara and Gayl Jones. Morrison herself would later emerge as one of the
most important African American writers of the twentieth century. Her first
novel, The Bluest Eye, was published in 1970. Among her most
famous novels is Beloved, which won the Pulitzer Prize for
fiction in 1988. This story describes a slave who found freedom but killed her
infant daughter to save her from a life of slavery. Another important novel
is Song of Solomon, a tale about materialism and
brotherhood. Morrison is the first African American woman to win the Nobel
Prize in literature. In the 1970s novelist and poet Alice Walker wrote a famous
essay that brought Zora Neale Hurston and her classic novel Their
Eyes Were Watching God back to the attention of the literary world. In
1982, Walker won both the Pulitzer Prize and the American Book Award for
her novel The Color Purple. An epistolary novel (a book written in
the form of letters), The Color Purple tells the story of
Celie, a young woman who is sexually abused by her stepfather and then is
forced to marry a man who physically abuses her. The novel was later made into
a film by Steven Spielberg. The 1970s also saw African American books topping
the bestseller lists. Among the first books to do so was Roots: the
Saga of an American Family by Alex Haley. The book, a
fictionalized account of Haley's family history—beginning with the kidnapping
of Haley's ancestor Kunta Kinte in Gambia through his life as a slave
in the United States won the Pulitzer Prize and became a popular television miniseries.
Haley also wrote The Autobiography of Malcolm X in 1965. Other
important writers in recent years include literary fiction writers Gayl Jones,
Ishmael Reed, Jamaica Kincaid, Randall Kenan, and John Edgar Wideman. African
American poets have also garnered attention. Maya Angelou read a poem
at Bill Clintons inauguration, Rita Dove won a Pulitzer Prize and served
as Poet Laureate of the United States from 1993 to 1995, and Cyrus
Cassells's Soul Make a Path through Shouting was nominated for
a Pulitzer Prize in 1994. Cassells is a recipient of the William Cralos
Williams Award. Lesser-known poets like Thylias Moss, and Natasha Trethewey
also have been praised for their innovative work. Notable black playwrights
include Ntozake Shange, who wrote For Colored Girls Who Have Considered
Suicide When the Rainbow Is Enuf; Ed Bullins; Suzan-Lori Parks; and the
prolific August Wilson, who won two Pulitzer Prizes for his plays. Most
recently, Edward P. Jones won the 2004 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction for The
Known World, his novel about a black slaveholder in the antebellum
South. Young African American novelists include Edwidge Danticat, David Anthony
Durham, Tayari Jones, Mat Johnson, ZZ Packer and Colson Whitehead, to name just
a few. African American literature has also crossed over to genre fiction. A
pioneer in this area is Chester Himes, who in the 1950s and 1960s wrote a
series of pulp fiction detective novels featuring "Coffin" Ed Johnson
and "Gravedigger" Jones, two New York City police detectives. Himes
paved the way for the later crime novels of Walter Mosley and Hugh Holton.
African Americans are also represented in the genres of science fiction ,
fantasy and horror, with Samuel R. Delany, Octavia E. Butler, Steven Barnes,
Tananarive Due, Robert Fleming, Brandon Massey, Charles R. Saunders, John
Ridley, John M. Faucette, Sheree Thomas, and Nalo Hopkinson among the more
well-known authors.
Generally African American literature involves the different
trends featuring the growth of African American literature including; early
African American literature, slave narratives, post-slavery era, Harlem Renaissance, Civil Rights Movement era
and Recent history as a results of freedom to these who were enslavement during
the colonialism.
REFERENCES
Andrews, W., F.
Foster, and T. Harris (1997).The Oxford Companion to African American Literature.
Oxford
Gates, H. The
Trials of Phillis Wheatley: America's First Black Poet and Her Encounters with the Founding Fathers.
Basic Civitas Books, 2003.
Gilyard, K., and A. Wardi. (2004) African
American Literature. Pearson Longman,.
Grossman, J. (2007). Historical research and Narrative of Chicago
and the Great Migration.
Jay, G. (1997). American
Literature and the Culture Wars: Cornell University Press.
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