Klasyka

Charles Waddell Chesnutt – The Quarry

Was Donald Glover really what he seemed–a handsome, dedicated, and clever African-American star of the Harlem Renaissance, whose looks made him the „quarry” of a variety of women? Or could the secrets of his birth change his destiny entirely? Focusing on the meaning of the racial identity, this novel moves inexorably toward a surprising denouement.

Bringing to life the culture of Harlem in the 1920s, Charles Chesnutt’s final novel dramatizes the political and aesthetic milieu of the exciting period we now know as the Harlem Renaissance. Mixing fact and fiction, and real and imagined characters, The Quarry is peopled with so many figures of the time–including Booker T. Washington, W. E. B. DuBois, and Marcus Garvey–that it constitutes a virtual guide to this inspiring period in American history.

Protagonist Glover is a light-skinned man, whose adoptive black parents are determined that he become a leader in the black community. Moving from Ohio to Tennessee, from rural Kentucky to Harlem, his story depicts not only his conflicted relationship to his heritage but also the situation of a variety of black people struggling to escape prejudice and to take advantage of new opportunities.

Edited with introduction and notes by Dean McWilliams

First published 1999 by Princeton University Press   źródło opisu: Princeton University Press, 1999 źródło okładki: goodreads.com

Wydawnictwo:
Princeton University Press
data wydania:
1999 (data przybliżona)

ISBN:
0691059969

liczba stron:
298

słowa kluczowe:
passing (uchodzenie) , Harlem Renaissance

kategoria:
klasyka

język:
angielski

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