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E-raamat: How We Do It: Black Writers on Craft, Practice, and Skill

  • Formaat: 352 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 04-Jul-2023
  • Kirjastus: HarperCollins Publishers
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780063278202
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
  • Hind: 14,17 €*
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This anthology of essays and interviews curated by Black writers is both a handbook and a reference tool that focuses on Black writers’ role in art, history, and culture. Original. 20,000 first printing.

More than 30 acclaimed writers—including diverse voices such as Nikki Giovanni, David Omotosho Black, Natasha Trethewey, Barry Jenkins, Jacqueline Woodson, Tayari Jones, and Angela Flournoy—reflect on their experience and expertise in this unique book on the craft of writing that focuses on the Black creative spirit.

How We Do It is an anthology curated by Black writers for the creation and proliferation of Black thought. While a creator’s ethnicity does not solely define them, it is inherently part of who they are and how they interpret the world.

For centuries, Black creators have utilized oral and written storytelling traditions in crafting their art. But how does one begin the process of constructing a poem or story or character? How do Black writers, when faced with questions of “authenticity,” dive deep into the essence of their lives and work to find the inherent truth? How We Do It addresses these profound questions. Not a traditional “how to” writing handbook, it seeks to guide rather than dictate and to validate the complexity and range of styles—and even how one thinks about craft itself.

An outstanding list of contributors offer their insights on a range of important topics. Pulitzer Prize winner Jericho Brown explores the lives personified in poetry, while Pulitzer Prize winner Natasha Trethewey explores decolonizing enduring metaphors. National Book Award finalist Angela Flournoy illuminates the pain of grief in all forms and how it can be revealed in the act of creation, and iconoclast Nikki Giovanni offers an elegiac declaration on language.

New and previously published essays and interviews provide encouragement, examples, and templates, and offer lessons on everything from poetic form and plotting a story to the lessons inherent in the act of writing, trial & error, and finding inspiration in the works of others, including those of Toni Morrison, Shakespeare, and Edward P. Jones. A handbook and a reference tool, How We Do It is a thoughtful and welcome tool that offers direction to help Black artists establish their own creative practice while celebrating and widening the scope of the Black writer’s role in art, history, and culture.

Contributors include Daniel Omotosho Black, Jericho Brown, Breena Clark, Rita Dove, Camille T. Dungy, W. Ralph Eubanks, Curdella Forbes, Angela Flournoy, Ernest Gaines, Nikki Giovanni, Marita Golden, Ravi Howard, Terrance Hayes, Mitchell S. Jackson, Barry Jenkins, Charles Johnson, Tayari Jones, Jamaica Kincaid, Tony Medina, E. Ethelbert Miller, Elizabeth Nunez, Carl Phillips, Jewell Parker Rhodes, Rion Amilcar Scott, Evie Shockley, Natasha Trethewey, Frank X Walker, Afaa M. Weaver, Crystal Wilkinson, Jacqueline Woodson, Tiphanie Yanique.

 

Introduction 1(8)
Jericho Brown
Who Your People?
Rhythm in Writing
9(6)
Daniel Omotosho Black
Asking Questions and Excavating Memory: Creating Complex Fictional Characters
15(7)
Crystal Wilkinson
When a Character Returns
22(5)
Rion Amilcar Scott
What Do You Want from Me
27(6)
Jacqueline Woodson
What You Got?
The "Natives of My Person" or Blood Is Not Enough: A Meditation on Literary Kinships
33(8)
Curdella Forbes
Sweet, Bittersweet, and Joyful Memories
41(4)
Jewell Parker Rhodes
How to Write a Memoir or Take Me to the River
45(8)
Marita Golden
Where You At?
Looking for a Place Called Home
53(6)
W. Ralph Eubanks
On Abiding Metaphors and Finding a Calling
59(26)
Natasha Trethewey
How They Must Have Felt---Imaginary Tulsa: Empathy and Writing Historical Fiction
85(5)
Breena Clarke
This Louisiana Thing That Drives Me: An Interview with Ernest J. Gaines
90(19)
Charles H. Rowell
Ernest J. Gaines
How You Living?
Seven Brides for Seven Mothers
109(10)
Rita Dove
Once More with Feeling
119(7)
Camille T. Dungy
Craft Capsules: An American Marriage
126(7)
Tayari Jones
Craft and the Art of Pulling Lincoln from a Hat
133(6)
E. Ethelbert Miller
What It Look Like?
Ready for the World: On Classroom, Craft, and Commanding Black Space
139(6)
Tony Medina
Wrangling the Line, Meditations on the Bop
145(7)
Afaa Michael Weaver
Fiction Forms: How to Make Fun and Profundity Possible in Fiction
152(12)
Tiphanie Yanique
Craft
164(2)
Nikki Giovanni
Jericho Brown in Conversation with Michael Dumanis
166(19)
Jericho Brown
Michael Dumanis
Who You With?
Those Words That Echo Echo Echo Through Life
185(6)
Jamaica Kincaid
Write What You Know or Nah?
191(7)
Tricia Elam Walker
Nations Through Their Mouths: Silence, Inner Voices, and Dialogue
198(6)
Ravi Howard
Writing Through Loss and Sorrow: Poetry as a Practice of Healing
204(7)
Frank X. Walker
An Interview with Barry Jenkins and Morgan Jerkins
211(18)
Barry Jenkins
Morgan Jerkins
How to Read
Nothing New: Black Poetic Experiment
229(8)
Evie Shockley
Yearning, Despair, and Outrage: Writing Loss in Fiction
237(9)
Angela Flournoy
Journal
246(17)
Terrance Hayes
Muscularity and Eros: On Syntax
263(28)
Carl Phillips
Going Back
Plotting the Plot
291(14)
Elizabeth Nunez
Re-Vision
305(15)
Mitchell S. Jackson
The Art of Revision: Most of What You Write Should Be Cut
320(7)
Charles Johnson
Afterword 327(3)
Darlene R. Taylor
Dana A. Williams
Contributors 330(7)
Credits & Permissions 337