From Apology to Protest: The Black American NovelEverett/Edwards, 1973 - 227 A survey of African-American novels chiefly written between 1940 and 1970. |
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... President's Daughter ( 1853 ) the dominant theme in the Negro novel is the problem black people face by living in a racist society . Black novelists in the United States have responded to white oppres- sion by exposing it in their ...
... President's Daughter ( 1853 ) the dominant theme in the Negro novel is the problem black people face by living in a racist society . Black novelists in the United States have responded to white oppres- sion by exposing it in their ...
Strona 203
... President's Daughter ( New York : Collier Books , 1970 ) , p . 177 . 3Lorenzo Dow Turner , Anti - Slavery Sentiment in American Literature Prior to 1865 ( Port Washington , New York : Kennikat Press , 1966 ) , p . 78 . 4Theodore L ...
... President's Daughter ( New York : Collier Books , 1970 ) , p . 177 . 3Lorenzo Dow Turner , Anti - Slavery Sentiment in American Literature Prior to 1865 ( Port Washington , New York : Kennikat Press , 1966 ) , p . 78 . 4Theodore L ...
Strona 217
... President's Daughter . New York : Collier Books , 1970. ( 1853 ) . Ch . 1 . Caldwell , Lewis . The Policy King . Chicago : New Vistas , 1945. Ch . 4 . Chesnutt , Charles W. Colonel's Dream . New York : 217 Supplementary Bibliography.
... President's Daughter . New York : Collier Books , 1970. ( 1853 ) . Ch . 1 . Caldwell , Lewis . The Policy King . Chicago : New Vistas , 1945. Ch . 4 . Chesnutt , Charles W. Colonel's Dream . New York : 217 Supplementary Bibliography.
Spis treści
Wright and the Protest Novel | 21 |
The Protest Tradition in the Forties | 33 |
The Revolt Against Wright | 51 |
Prawa autorskie | |
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accept action American apologetic aspects attempts Baldwin basically becomes Bigger brother Brown characters concentrates concerned continued deals death decides depicts discovers discrimination dominant effects effort environment escape eventually existence experience exploitation face fact fear feels fiction fight finally finds forced freedom friends ghetto girl give Harlem human identity illustrates indicates individual invisible involved John killed lives major manner means merely militant murder Native Negro novelists objective oppression organized period person plantation popular position prejudice presents pressures primarily problems produced protagonist protest novel psychological race racial racism realizes rebel refuses representative respect responsible result reveal role sense sexual situation social society South story Street stresses Tell tends theme Thomas tion tradition tries turns victim violence white society wife woman Wright writers York young youth