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African American Poetry

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African American Poetry

African American Poetry

In the 19th century, abolitionist and African-American periodicals printed thousands of poems by black men and women on such topics as bondage and freedom, hatred and discrimination, racial identity and racial solidarity, along with dialect verse that mythologized the Southern past. Early in the 20th century, black poets celebrated race consciousness in propagandistic and protest poetry, while World War I helped engender the outpouring of African-American creativity known as the "Harlem Renaissance."
The present volume spans this wealth of material, ranging from the religious and moral verse of Phillis Wheatley Peters (ca. 1753–1784) to the 20th-century sensibilities of Langston Hughes and Countee Cullen. Also here are works by George Moses Horton, Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, Alberry Alston Whitman, Henrietta Cordelia Ray, Daniel Webster Davis, Mary Weston Fordham, James Weldon Johnson, Paul Laurence Dunbar, and many more.
Attractive and inexpensive, this carefully chosen collection offers unparalleled insight into the hearts and minds of African-Americans. It will be welcomed by students of the black experience in America and any lover of fine poetry.


Dover Original.
black history month; black af history; slaves; Slavery; black authors; black history books for kids adults; negro history spirituals;history week;negro life;double consciousness;vocational education;guilty people;dolls house;hedda gabler;revolutionary forces;22 million;talented tenth;star line;marcus garvey;color line;master builder;proper education;social theory;du bois;white supremacy;remains relevant;depend solely;racial injustice;home library;educational system;frederick douglass;freed slaves;barack obama;post traumatic;highly educated;social justice;jim crow;college students;race relations;martin luther;civil rights;mis-education;miseducation;afrikan;double-consciousness;ibsen;naacp;negroes;dubois;stanza;woodson;lynching;1903;african-americans;minorities;emancipation;1933;veil;whites;speeches;equality;booker;carter;george moses horton frances ellen watkins harper alberry alston whitman henrietta cordelia ray daniel webster;james weldon johnson paul laurence dunbar;phillis wheatley;george marion mcclellan;priscilla jane thompson;james langston hughes;joseph seamon;countee cullen;joshua mccarter;james edwin campbell;
$1.80

Original: $6.00

-70%
African American Poetry

$6.00

$1.80

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In the 19th century, abolitionist and African-American periodicals printed thousands of poems by black men and women on such topics as bondage and freedom, hatred and discrimination, racial identity and racial solidarity, along with dialect verse that mythologized the Southern past. Early in the 20th century, black poets celebrated race consciousness in propagandistic and protest poetry, while World War I helped engender the outpouring of African-American creativity known as the "Harlem Renaissance."
The present volume spans this wealth of material, ranging from the religious and moral verse of Phillis Wheatley Peters (ca. 1753–1784) to the 20th-century sensibilities of Langston Hughes and Countee Cullen. Also here are works by George Moses Horton, Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, Alberry Alston Whitman, Henrietta Cordelia Ray, Daniel Webster Davis, Mary Weston Fordham, James Weldon Johnson, Paul Laurence Dunbar, and many more.
Attractive and inexpensive, this carefully chosen collection offers unparalleled insight into the hearts and minds of African-Americans. It will be welcomed by students of the black experience in America and any lover of fine poetry.


Dover Original.
black history month; black af history; slaves; Slavery; black authors; black history books for kids adults; negro history spirituals;history week;negro life;double consciousness;vocational education;guilty people;dolls house;hedda gabler;revolutionary forces;22 million;talented tenth;star line;marcus garvey;color line;master builder;proper education;social theory;du bois;white supremacy;remains relevant;depend solely;racial injustice;home library;educational system;frederick douglass;freed slaves;barack obama;post traumatic;highly educated;social justice;jim crow;college students;race relations;martin luther;civil rights;mis-education;miseducation;afrikan;double-consciousness;ibsen;naacp;negroes;dubois;stanza;woodson;lynching;1903;african-americans;minorities;emancipation;1933;veil;whites;speeches;equality;booker;carter;george moses horton frances ellen watkins harper alberry alston whitman henrietta cordelia ray daniel webster;james weldon johnson paul laurence dunbar;phillis wheatley;george marion mcclellan;priscilla jane thompson;james langston hughes;joseph seamon;countee cullen;joshua mccarter;james edwin campbell;