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The New Red Negro: The Literary Left and African American Poetry, 1930-1946 (Race and American Culture)
 
 
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The New Red Negro: The Literary Left and African American Poetry, 1930-1946 (Race and American Culture) [Hardcover]

James Edward Smethurst (Author)

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Book Description

019512054X 978-0195120547 April 15, 1999 1
The New Red Negro surveys African-American poetry from the onset of the Depression to the early days of the Cold War. It considers the relationship between the thematic and formal choices of African-American poets and organized ideology from the proletarian early 1930s to the neo-modernist late 1940s. This study examines poetry by writers across the spectrum: canonical, less well-known, and virtually unknown.

The ideology of the Communist Left as particularly expressed through cultural institutions of the literary Left significantly influenced the shape of African-American poetry in the 1930s and 40s, as well as the content. One result of this engagement of African-American writers with the organized Left was a pronounced tendency to regard the re-created folk or street voice as the authentic voice--and subject--of African-American poetry. Furthermore, a masculinist rhetoric was crucial to the re-creation of this folk voice.

This unstable yoking of cultural nationalism, integrationism, and internationalism within a construct of class struggle helped to shape a new relationship of African-American poetry to vernacular African-American culture. This relationship included the representation of African-American working class and rural folk life and its cultural products ostensibly from the mass perspective. It also included the dissemination of urban forms of African-American popular culture, often resulting in mixed media high- low hybrids.

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"Smethurst fills a gap in the study of African American literature....Extensive notes on the text and bibliography provide insight into Smethurst's sources and analysis and provide a basis for further scholarly examination of the period and its issues."--Choice


About the Author

James Edward Smethurst is at University of North Florida.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
dream deferred, commercial theatre, cullud folkses, narratorial consciousness, neomodernist style, folk subject, folk voice, narratorial stance, masculinist rhetoric, mass commercial culture, vernacular poems, blues poetry, blues poems, revolutionary poetry, vernacular voice
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Southern Road, Popular Front, African Americans, Communist Left, Langston Hughes, The New Red Negro, New Negro Renaissance, Sterling Brown, New Masses, African-American Poetry, United States, Scottsboro Limited, Third Period, Richard Wright, World War, Frank Marshall Davis, Black Belt Thesis, Tin Roof Blues, Don't You Want, Fine Clothes, Rise of Neomodernism, Margaret Walker, Raid Over Harlem, Countee Cullen, Jim Crow
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