A
Long Way from Home
Price: $22.95
Author: Claude McKay
Subject: Literature / African American
Studies
Paper ISBN 0-8135-3968-4
Cloth ISBN 0-8135-3967-6
Pages: 256 pp.
Series: Multi-Ethnic
Literatures of the Americas
Publication Date: February, 2007
Description:
Claude McKay (1889-1948) was one of the most prolific and
sophisticated African American writers of the early twentieth century.
A Jamaican-born author of poetry, short stories, novels, and
nonfiction, McKay has often been associated with the "New Negro" or
Harlem Renaissance, a movement of African American art, culture, and
intellectualism between World War I and the Great Depression. But his
relationship to the movement was complex. Literally absent from Harlem
during the Renaissance, McKay devoted most of his time to traveling
through Europe, Russia, and Africa during the 1920s and 1930s. His
active participation in Communist groups and the radical Left also
encouraged certain opinions on race and class that strained his
relationship to the Harlem Renaissance and its black intelligentsia.
In his 1937 autobiography, A Long Way from Home, McKay
explains what it means to be a black "rebel sojourner" and presents one
of the first unflattering, yet informative, exposés of the
Harlem Renaissance. Reprinted here with a critical introduction by Gene
Andrew Jarrett, this book will challenge readers to rethink McKay's
articulation of identity, art, race, and politics and situate these
topics in terms of his oeuvre and his literary contemporaries between
the World Wars.
About the Author:
Gene Andrew Jarrett is an assistant professor of
English at the University of Maryland, College Park, and the author of Deans
and Truants: Race and Realism in African American Literature.
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Price: $22.95
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