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Picturing the New Negro: Harlem Renaissance Print Culture and Modern Black Identity (Culture America)
 
 
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Picturing the New Negro: Harlem Renaissance Print Culture and Modern Black Identity (Culture America) [Hardcover]

Caroline Goeser (Author)

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Book Description

January 22, 2007 0700614664 978-0700614660
During the 1920s and 1930s, black artists and writers achieved something totally unprecedented: they created a new image of African Americans that truly reflected their times as well as their history. In so doing, they set the artistic agenda of the Harlem Renaissance and gave form to some of its most compelling visions. This innovative study examines the efforts of Harlem Renaissance artists and writers to create a hybrid expression of black identity that drew on their ancient past while participating in contemporary American culture. Caroline Goeser investigates a critical component of Harlem Renaissance print culture that until now has been largely overlooked, arguing that illustrations became the most timely and often most radical visual products of the movement. This vibrant partnership between literary and visual talents-a trail blazed by artist Aaron Douglas and poet Langston Hughes-resulted in the image of the New Negro, one that remade the African American past in order to foster greater participation in modern American culture and commerce. Illustrations by Douglas, James Wells, Gwendolyn Bennett, and others appeared on covers of books about black American life and in journals such as Opportunity and The Crisis. Goeser considers the strategies that these artists developed to circumvent stereotypes and shows how their work was received within the movement and in mainstream America. Connecting visual imagery with literary text and commercial enterprise, these illustrations participated in the modern economy in ways that painting and sculpture could not. Goeser reveals how Harlem Renaissance illustrators depicted the wide-ranging and sometimes conflicting ideas about black identity held within the community: African roots and Egyptian heritage, racial uplift and gay pride. She shows how some artists revisited the Judeo-Christian tradition by portraying a black Adam and Jesus, and examines the interdependent relationships between race and sexuality in the work of artists Richard Bruce Nugent and Charles Cullen, the former black, the latter white. Goeser clearly shows that, contrary to common belief, the visual image of the New Negro was created by African Americans, for African Americans. Her work assigns a central role to black artists as cultural innovators intimately involved with the construction of identity and new expressive paradigms and is a new touchstone in understanding both the emergence of black identity and American culture between the world wars.

Frequently Bought Together

Customers buy this book with Art in Crisis: W. E. B. Du Bois and the Struggle for African American Identity and Memory $24.95

Picturing the New Negro: Harlem Renaissance Print Culture and Modern Black Identity (Culture America) + Art in Crisis: W. E. B. Du Bois and the Struggle for African American Identity and Memory


Editorial Reviews

From the Back Cover

"Goeser makes a persuasive case for illustration as the primary form of New Negro visual expression. Her careful analysis is supported by a wide range of texts, including an extraordinary pool of images brought together here for the first time. . . . An extremely important and original contribution to the understanding of visual culture in the Harlem Renaissance."--Mary Ann Calo, author of Bernard Berenson and the Twentieth Century

"Goeser sensitively analyzes a diverse array of vibrant stylistic innovations that associated blackness with ideals of strength, beauty, and creative energy. Thoroughly researched and beautifully written, her compelling book makes a major contribution to the literature on twentieth-century African American and American art."--Helen Langa, author of Radical Art: Printmaking and the Left in 1930s New York

About the Author

Caroline Goeser is assistant professor of art history in the School of Art at the University of Houston.

Caroline Goeser is Associate Director for Interpretation at the Cleveland Museum of Art. She was formerly an associate professor of art history at the University of Houston.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
rare book library, little pitchers, bewitched sword, modern black identity, black illustrators, black primitivism, print venues, new primitivism, minstrel mask, primitive identity, illustrative work, critical ambivalence, dust jacket design, visual stereotypes, silhouetted forms, modern agency
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, African American, Harlem Renaissance, Aaron Douglas, Langston Hughes, Countee Cullen, New Negro, Alain Locke, Charles Cullen, Winold Reiss, God's Trombones, Gwendolyn Bennett, Publishers Weekly, Art Deco, Vanity Fair, Van Vechten, Laura Wheeler, Richard Bruce Nugent, James Weldon Johnson, Yale University, National Urban League, Yale Collection of American Literature, Associated Publishers, Miguel Covarrubias, Simms Campbell
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Front Cover | Front Flap | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Back Flap | Back Cover | Surprise Me!
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