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A Touch of Innocence: A Memoir of Childhood
 
 
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A Touch of Innocence: A Memoir of Childhood [Paperback]

Katherine Dunham (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

June 1, 1994
An internationally known dancer, choreographer, and gifted anthropologist, Katherine Dunham was born to a black American tailor and a well-to-do French Canadian woman twenty years his senior. This book is Dunham's story of the chaos and conflict that entered her childhood after her mother's early death.

In stark prose, she tells of growing up in both black and white households and of the divisions of race and class in Chicago that become the harsh realities of her young life. A riveting narrative of one girl's struggle to transcend the painful confusions of a family and culture in turmoil, Dunham's story is full of the clarity, candor, and intelligence that lifted her above her troubled beginnings.

"A Touch of Innocence is an absorbing family chronicle written with a gift for physical detail sometimes too real for comfort. In quietly graphic prose the growing girl, the slightly older brother, the ambitious father and the kind stepmother are pictured in such human terms that when their lives get tied into harder and harder knots beyond their undoing, one can only continue to read helplessly as doom closes in upon the household."—Langston Hughes, New York Herald Tribune

"A Touch of Innocence is one of the most extraordinary life stories I have ever read . . . . The content of this book is so heartbreaking that only the strongest artistic skills can keep it from leaking out into sobbing self-pity, but Katherine Dunham's art contains it, understands it and refuses to be overwhelmed by its terrors."—Elizabeth Janeway, New York Times

"The first eighteen years of the famous dancer and choreographer's life are brought vividly to the reader in this first volume of her autobiography. She writes of what it is like to be a special, gifted young woman growing up in a racially mixed family in the American Middle West. A beautiful, touching and sometimes discomforting book."—Publishers Weekly

"As writing it is honest, searing, graphic and touching, giving us a rather heartbreaking early view of the young American Negro who was later to make a name for herself as a dancer and choreographer."—Arthur Todd, Saturday Review

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A Touch of Innocence: A Memoir of Childhood + Island Possessed + Kaiso!: Writings by and about Katherine Dunham (Studies in Dance History)
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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Long before terms like "multiculturalism" and "world music" came into vogue, dancer, choreographer, and University of Chicago-trained anthropologist Katherine Dunham traveled to Africa, the West Indies, and South America, chronicling the spread of Africa-derived dance traditions and creating a multitude of critically acclaimed revues, including Tropics and Le Jazz Hot. Her choreography was even featured in the 1943 film Stormy Weather. But Dunham's autobiography, written in the late 1950s while she was on a sojourn in Japan, is bittersweet. She was born on June 22, 1909, in Joliet, Illinois, the daughter of a West African-Malagasy father and a light-complexioned mother of French-Canadian-Native American heritage who died when Dunham was an infant. A Touch of Innocence chronicles the first 18 years of Dunham's life: her upbringing with her brother, Albert Jr., in the white suburb of Glen Ellyn; the antagonism of her domineering father; and the experience of being raised by aunts in Chicago while her dad worked as a traveling salesman. From this piercing work, the world-famous dance icon emerges with the all-embracing allure of the everyday aristocracy that the best African American achievers radiate. --Eugene Holley Jr.

From Library Journal

These titles represent an odd combination from a person who was equally unusual-she is both a noteworthy choreographer and an anthropologist. Innocence is Dunham's 1959 autobiography as well as, she says, "the story of a world that has vanished." Island (1969) is a "nostalgic, funny, scientific" anthropology title on Haiti (LJ 9/15/69). With that country making recent headlines for atrocities, this may be a portrait of another world now vanished.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 320 pages
  • Publisher: University Of Chicago Press (June 1, 1994)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0226171124
  • ISBN-13: 978-0226171128
  • Product Dimensions: 7.9 x 5.3 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #943,348 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderfully written!, November 30, 1997
By 
kcoryat@sover.net (the University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont) - See all my reviews
This review is from: A Touch of Innocence: A Memoir of Childhood (Paperback)
I read A Touch of Innocence as research for a project on black dance in America and found myself lost in a different world. Dunham's autobiography of her early years is a work of art. Her descriptive prose reads like that of one who writes for a living instead of as a diverting side-line to the dance. This book should be on the nightstand of every person interested in great black literature.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Really?, October 14, 2008
By 
H. Long (Tallahassee, FL) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: A Touch of Innocence: A Memoir of Childhood (Paperback)
This is quite possibly the most boring book I've ever read, and it usually takes a lot to get me to lose interest. Honestly, I would not choose this as a potential leisure read.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
She stood first on one foot then the other, leaning on the BB gun and gazing across the dreary field of winter corn which seemed, overcome by the leaden sky, to be trying to curl back into the snow that lay ankle deep as far as the eye could reach. Read the first page
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tumbler room, dust wheel, pressing table, cello lessons, pressing iron, pressing machine
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Annette Dunham, Albert Dunham, Bluff Street, Katherine Dunham, Aunt Lulu, Glen Ellyn, Helen Weir, Lady Fern, Fanny June, Lulu Dunham, West Side Cleaners, Brown's Chapel, Will Humbles, Uncle Ed, Br'er Rabbit, Mayme Humbles, Aunt Mayme, Reverend Scott, Aunt Alice, Meredith Cardwell, Rebecca Brown, Br'er Fox, Grandmother Buckner, Henry Simon, George Weir
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