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James Baldwin [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 412 pages
  • Sari: Critical Insights
  • Ilmumisaeg: 22-Oct-2010
  • Kirjastus: Salem Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1587657015
  • ISBN-13: 9781587657016
  • Formaat: Hardback, 412 pages
  • Sari: Critical Insights
  • Ilmumisaeg: 22-Oct-2010
  • Kirjastus: Salem Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1587657015
  • ISBN-13: 9781587657016
Although James Baldwin today holds a secure position in the canon of twentieth-century literature, more than twenty years after his death he still remains one of America's most illusive authors. An eloquent writer who wanted to be more than just "a Negro novelist," he nevertheless became one of the country's most prominent African American leaders when Time magazine emblazoned his image across its cover in 1963. The body of his work-six novels, a handful of short stories, and five major essay collections along with three plays and a book of poetry-is wide-ranging, complex, and occasionally contradictory, the product of a mind in a tireless dialogue with itself and its paradoxical and swiftly changing culture.

Edited and with an introduction by Morris Dickstein, Distinguished Professor of English at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York and senior fellow of the Center for the Humanities, this volume in the Critical Insights series brings together a wide variety of insightful and provocative essays on Baldwin's novels, short stories, essays, and plays. Dickstein's introduction considers the rise and fall of Baldwin's remarkable career and the unique space the author carved for himself in American letters. Writing on behalf of The Paris Review, Richard Beck meditates on the many varieties of homelessness that Baldwin-a sometime expatriate always at odds with mainstream American culture-embodied in his work and his life.

For those studying Baldwin for the first time, a series of introductory essays acquaint readers with the key themes and contexts of his work. Douglas Field situates Baldwin within the culture and politics of his time, and James Campbell describes how Baldwin's flight to Paris in 1948 influenced two of his most important essays, "Everybody's Protest Novel" and "Preservation of Innocence." Horace A. Porter then explores Baldwin's relationship with two of his literary forebears, Richard Wright and Harriet Beecher Stowe, and Mildred R. Mickle offers a comparative analysis of the depiction of faith in works by Baldwin, Phillis Wheatley, Tananarive Due, and Octavia E. Butler. D. Quentin Miller traces the arc of Baldwin's popular and academic reception up to the present day.

A collection of classic and contemporary essays then deepen readers' understanding. A number of pieces are dedicated to Baldwin's essays and their cultural and political contexts. Geraldine Murphy examines how the New York Intellectuals, with whom Baldwin regularly appeared in the pages of Commentary and Partisan Review, influenced the formation of his early political views, and Douglas Field explicates Baldwin's complex alliance with black nationalism and how its rhetoric affected his later work, a subject F. W. Dupee also takes up in his assessment of The Fire Next Time.

Baldwin's individual literary works are also treated in a variety of essays. Charles Scruggs and Peter Kerry Powers both examine Baldwin's first and most popular novel, Go Tell It on the Mountain, and its themes of regret, recollection, and confession. John M. Reilly considers one of Baldwin's most frequently anthologized short stories, "Sonny's Blues," and Tiffany Gilbert analyzes the themes of nostalgia and sexual desire in close readings of Giovanni's Room and "Going to Meet the Man." Lionel Trilling offers an assessment of Another Country, and C. W. E. Bigsby in turn considers the merits and flaws of one of Baldwin's few plays, Blues for Mr. Charlie. If Beale Street Could Talk is the subject of two essays, one by Yoshinobu Hakutani and one by Trudier Harris.

Rounding out the volume are two highly readable and insightful essays, by Darryl Pinckney, on Baldwin's inimitable mind and the value of his work, as well as a brief biography of Baldwin, a chronology of his life, and a bibliography of resources for readers wishing to learn more about this fascinating author.

Finally, the volume's appendixes offer a section of useful reference resources:



A chronology of the author's life

A complete list of the author's works and their original dates of publication

A general bibliography

A detailed paragraph on the volume's editor

Notes on the individual chapter authors

A subject index
About This Volume vii
Morris Dickstein
Career, Life, and Influence
On James Baldwin
3(8)
Morris Dickstein
Biography of James Baldwin
11(6)
Barry Mann
The Paris Review Perspective
17(6)
Richard Beck
Critical Contexts
James Baldwin in his Time
23(16)
Douglas Field
Exiled in Paris: The Beginnings
39(12)
James Campbell
"This Web of Lust and Fury": Harriet Beecher Stowe, James Baldwin's Nineteenth-Century White Mother
51(27)
Horace A. Porter
Faith in Verse and Fiction: James Baldwin's, Phillis Wheatley's Octavia E. Butler's, and Tananarive Due's Creation of a Peaceful Space
78(17)
Mildred R. Mickle
James Baldwin's Critical Reception
95(18)
D. Quentin Miller
Critical Readings
Looking for Jimmy Baldwin: Sex, Privacy, and Black Nationalist Fervor
113(37)
Douglas Field
The Tale of Two Cities in James Baldwin's Go Tell it on the Mountain
150(19)
Charles Scruggs
The Treacherous Body: Isolation, Confession, and Community in James Baldwin
169(30)
Peter Kerry Powers
Subversive Anti-Stalinism: Race and Sexuality in the Early Essays of James Baldwin
199(31)
Geraldine Murphy
"Sonny's Blues": James Baldwin's Image of Black Community
230(9)
John M. Reilly
The Queering of Memory: Nostalgia and Desire in Baldwin's "Going to Meet the Man,"
239(15)
Tiffany Gilbert
On James Baldwin's Another Country
254(8)
Lionel Trilling
James Baldwin and the "Man,"
262(6)
F. W. Dupee
The Committed Writer: James Baldwin as Dramatist
268(15)
C. W. E. Bigsby
If the Street Could Talk: James Baldwin's Search for Love and Understanding
283(22)
Yoshinobu Hakutani
Bearing the Burden of the Blues: If Beale Street Could Talk
305(45)
Trudier Harris
The Fire Last Time
350(15)
Henry Louis Gates
The Magic of James Baldwin
365(35)
Darryl Pinckney
James Baldwin: The Risks of Love
400(33)
Darryl Pinckney
Resources
Chronology of James Baldwin's Life
433(3)
Works
436(2)
James Baldwin
Bibliography
438(5)
About the Editor 443(1)
About The Paris Review 443(2)
Contributors 445(3)
Acknowledgments 448(2)
Index 450