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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Strona 107
... racism does not directly affect the youth.until he violates an unwritten code of decorum . Racism then takes over as the theme of the novel , but it is expressed only through sensationalism . The legal manipulations used to keep Negroes ...
... racism does not directly affect the youth.until he violates an unwritten code of decorum . Racism then takes over as the theme of the novel , but it is expressed only through sensationalism . The legal manipulations used to keep Negroes ...
Strona 154
... racism that follows him . Smith himself , though , wages war on racism through his verbal assaults . Much of the novel consists of dialogue in which American Negroes point out the faults of their native country with an undisguised ...
... racism that follows him . Smith himself , though , wages war on racism through his verbal assaults . Much of the novel consists of dialogue in which American Negroes point out the faults of their native country with an undisguised ...
Strona 156
... racism . Love can triumph , according to the author , but only at the cost of alienation from a racist world ... racism on an individual basis . White society in general , though , as depicted in both Speak Now and Another Country , is ...
... racism . Love can triumph , according to the author , but only at the cost of alienation from a racist world ... racism on an individual basis . White society in general , though , as depicted in both Speak Now and Another Country , is ...
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 accommodationist novel action American Ann Petry apologetic protest aspects assimilationist novel attempts Baldwin basically becomes Beetlecreek Bigger Thomas black characters black novelists black youth brother Brown Carmier Catherine Carmier Chester Himes Cleo deals death depicts discovers discrimination dominant Ellison environment escape eventually existence exploitation forced ghetto Harlem hatred hero Himes illustrates individual invisible James Baldwin Jones killed Killens literary lives lynched major Malcolm X Maud Martha melodrama merely metaphysical rebel militant protest novel murder Native Native Son Negro novel organized Petry plantation tradition popular prejudice presents pressures primarily problems propagandistic protagonist protest fiction psychological race racial themes racism realizes reveal Richard Wright role sexual sixties slave slavery social South stereotypes Street stresses tends tion victim violence W. E. B. DuBois white girl white oppression white power structure white society white woman white world wife William William Gardner Smith York Youngblood