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In Living Our Stories, Telling Our Truths V. P. Franklin reinterprets the lives and thought of twelve major black American writers and political leaders - including Richard Wright, Zora Neale Hurston, W. E. B.
Du Bois, James Baldwin, Malcolm X, Amiri Baraka, Gwendolyn Brooks, and Adam Clayton Powell, as well as now lesser known but equally crucial figures, among them Alexander Crummell, who declared black Americans a "chosen people" of the Lord; James Weldon Johnson, a key member of the Harlem Renaissance; Harry Haywood, a Communist Party member who forced the party to recognize the revolutionary potential of the black working class; and reformer, journalist, and women's rights advocate Ida B.
Wells-Barnett, the most famous black American woman of the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries.
V. P. Franklin shows that autobiography occupies the central position in the African-American literary and intellectual tradition because "oftentimes personal truth was stranger than fiction." Whether they believed that African Americans were destined to "redeem the soul of America," in the words of James Baldwin, or that black people in the United States must be liberated "by any means necessary," the men and women whose life stories V. P.
Franklin retells all spoke out for self-determination and independent black leadership.
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Living our stories, telling our truths: autobiography and the making of the African-American intellectual tradition
1996, Oxford University Press
in English
0195103734 9780195103731
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Living our stories, telling our truths: autobiography and the making of the African-American intellectual tradition
1995, Scribner
in English
068912192X 9780689121920
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Book Details
Edition Notes
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Originally published: New York : Scribner, 1995.
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