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  •  
    375,-

    Here in a facsimile of the 1930 edition is Willis Richardson's collection of twelve plays and pageants that playwrights of the era wrote expressly for black audiences, mainly students and other young black people who staged them. This is the important work of nine significant dramatists who helped to lay the foundations of African American drama.

  • av Timothy P. Lynch
    375,-

    The Depression brought unprecedented changes for American workers and organized labor. As the economy plummeted, employers cut wages and laid off workers, while simultaneously attempting to wrest more work from those who remained employed. In mills, mines, and factories workers organized and resisted, striking for higher wages, improved working conditions, and the right to bargain collectively. As workers walked the picket line or sat down on the shop floor, they could be heard singing. This book examines the songs they sang at three different strikes- the Gastonia, North Carolina, textile mill strike (1929), Harlan County, Kentucky, coal mining strike (1931-32), and Flint, Michigan, automobile sit-down strike (1936-37). Whether in the Carolina Piedmont, the Kentucky hills, or the streets of Michigan, the workers' songs were decidedly class-conscious. All show the workers' understanding of the necessity of solidarity and collective action. In Flint the strikers sang: The trouble in our homestead Was brought about this way When a dashing corporation Had the audacity to say You must all renounce your union And forswear your liberties, And we'll offer you a chance To live and die in slavery. As a shared experience, the singing of songs not only sent the message of collective action but also provided the very means by which the message was communicated and promoted. Singing was a communal experience, whether on picket lines, at union rallies, or on shop floors. By providing the psychological space for striking workers to speak their minds, singing nurtured a sense of community and class consciousness. When strikers retold the events of their strike, as they did in songs, they spread and preserved their common history and further strengthened the bonds among themselves. In the strike songs the roles of gender were pronounced and vivid. Wives and mothers sang out of their concerns for home, family, and children. Men sang in the name of worker loyalty and brotherhood, championing male solidarity and comaraderie. Informed by the new social history, this critical examination of strike songs from three different industries in three different regions gives voice to a group too often deemed as inarticulate. This study, the only book-length examination of this subject, tells history "e;from the bottom up"e; and furthers an understanding of worker culture during the tumultuous Depression years.

  • - Essays from the Southern Quarterly
     
    449,-

    Offers a collection of twenty-one literary and historical essays to mark the 50th anniversary of the Southern Quarterly, one of the oldest scholarly journals dedicated to southern studies. The Past Is Not Dead features the best of the work published in the journal. Essays represent every decade of the journal's history, from the 1960s to the 2000s.

  • - Essays from the Southern Quarterly
     
    905

    Offers a collection of twenty-one literary and historical essays to mark the 50th anniversary of the Southern Quarterly, one of the oldest scholarly journals dedicated to southern studies. The Past Is Not Dead features the best of the work published in the journal. Essays represent every decade of the journal's history, from the 1960s to the 2000s.

  • - Black Writers and Artists of the Depression Generation
    av Brian Dolinar
    509 - 1 899

    Describes how the social and political movements that grew out of the Depression facilitated the left turn of several African American artists and writers. The formation of a black cultural front is examined by looking at the works of poet Langston Hughes, novelist Chester Himes, and cartoonist Ollie Harrington.

  • - Vicksburg and Her Plantations, 1863a "1870
    av James T. Currie
    375,-

    James T. Currie relates in this thought-provoking work that between July 4, 1863, and the end of the Civil War in May 1865, Vicksburg and the plantations around it were an enclave of Union territory in the heart of the Confederacy. He also identifies many of the problems confronting the city during the late 1860s and indicates the means through which solutions were sought.

  • - The Mississippi Chinese
    av Robert Seto Quan
    459

    Unlike most Chinese-American studies which focus on large urban concentrations sustained by continuous immigration, this study centres on a small Chinese enclave located in a rural Southern biracial society. It focuses upon three generations of Chinese undergoing social change in an area within the state of Mississippi known as the Delta.

  • av Kathryn Tucker Windham
    509

    Remembering the sting of male discrimination she repeatedly endured during her career as a newspaper-woman, Kathryn Tucker Windham, with wistful amusement, recalls here the hurt and the awful fact of being overlooked, snubbed, and ribbed by her male colleagues.

  • - A Southern Wayfarer
    av William Rodney Allen
    385,-

    This valuable and informative book is a study of Percy's five novels in the context of his southern and American literary sources and his tragic personal history. This perceptive study examines Percy's novels in the light of psychoanalytic theory, philosophy, and literary analysis. The author finds that Percy's fiction has been shaped as much by what Percy rejected as by what he embraced.

  • - Emerging Tradition and the Lost Boys of Sudan
    av Felicia R. McMahon
    509

    Felicia R. McMahon breaks new ground in the presentation and analysis of emerging traditions of the "Lost Boys", a group of parentless youths who fled Sudan under tragic circumstances in the 1990s. With compelling insight, McMahon analyzes the oral traditions of the DiDinga Lost Boys, about whom very little is known.

  • av Elaine Neil Orr
    375,-

    This intense examination of the writings of Tillie Olsen shows Elaine Neil Orr's deeply sympathetic passion for Olsen's literary world. Orr's objective is not simply to offer literary criticism but to interpret the subjects that inspire and disclose Olsen's spiritual vision.

  • - Portraits of Life-Changing World Music Artists
    av Randall Grass
    1 469,-

    Presents a series of personal accounts and interviews with some of the most interesting and important world music artists, revealing the unique essence of each as a person, musician, and force for global change.

  • av Myrlie Evers
    375,-

    Introduced in a reflective essay written by the acclaimed author Willie Morris, this account of Medgar Evers's professional and family life will cause readers to ponder how his tragic martyrdom quickened the pace of justice for black people while withholding justice from him for thirty years.

  • av Janet Sharp Hermann
    509

    This fascinating history set in the Reconstruction South is a testament to African-American resilience, fortitude, and independence. It tells of three attempts to create an ideal community on the river bottom lands at Davis Bend south of Vicksburg.

  • - The Sixties in Afro-American Fiction
    av Norman Harris
    509

    Offers a stimulating analysis of a period of American history through the literary art it produced. Norman Harris focuses on how Afro-Americans involved in the Civil Rights Movement, the Black Power movement, or the Vietnam War either failed or achieved in making sense of their lives when the goals they struggled for were not accomplished.

  •  
    635

    These essays, originally presented by Faulkner scholars, black and white, male and female, at the 1986 Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha Conference, the thirteenth in a series of conferences held on the Oxford campus of the University of Mississippi, explore the relationship between Faulkner and race.

  • - Silver in Mississippi
    av James W. Silver
    509

  • - The Myths of America in Popular Music from Colonial Times to the Present
    av Timothy E. Scheurer
    545

    Explores the myth of America as reflected in its popular music. Beginning with the songs of the Pilgrims and continuing through more than two centuries of history and music, this book gives a close reading of the compositions of songwriters as diverse as William Billings, Irving Berlin, Bob Dylan and Bruce Springsteen.

  •  
    509

    These collected essays chart the World War I and its cultural contours from new and challenging intellectual vantage points. Contributors contest the long-accepted argument about World War I as the crucible of modern life. Instead, they argue that the war was as much a moment of cultural opportunity as it was the origin for modern society.

  •  
    635

    In these stimulating papers from the Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha Conference in 1985, feminism and Faulkner studies collide, with beneficial results for each. The disruptive and disturbing characterization of women in Faulkner's fictional world and the influence of actual women in the novelist's life are given attentive study in these papers.

  • - The Rise and Fall of Seven Oaks
    av Marc R. Matrana
    375,-

    Along the banks of the Mississippi River across from New Orleans, Camille Zeringue transformed a mediocre colonial plantation into a thriving gem of antebellum sugar production. The privileged master nurtured his own family, but enslaved many others. This book tells both of Zeringue's climb to the top and of his legacy's eventual ruin.

  • - Mississippi Journalists Confront the Movement
     
    509

    The nine essays in The Press and Race illuminate the broad array of print journalists' responses to the civil rights movement in Mississippi, a state that was one of the US's major civil rights battlegrounds. Three of the journalists covered won Pulitzer prizes and one was the first woman editorial writer to earn that coveted prize.

  • - A New Pandora's Box
    av Anthony Dawahare
    459

    Argues that such writers as A. Philip Randolph, Langston Hughes, and Richard Wright, who often saw the world in terms of class struggle, did more to advance the anti-racist politics of African American letters than writers such as Countee Cullen, Alain Locke, and Marcus Garvey, who remained enmeshed in nationalist and racialist discourse.

  •  
    565

    As Gender and the Southern Body Politic examines literature and art, labour and law, manhood and womanhood, the historians contributing to this volume argue that politics is not limited to the machinations of parties, candidates, and voters. Instead, they suggest that private matters -- family, home, and sexuality -- are integral to the construction of public power.

  • - Circles of Influence
    av Nicole King
    509

    Defining creolization as a process by which European, African, Amerindian, Asian, and American cultures are amalgamated to form new hybrid cultures, Nicole King uses this process as a means to understand C.L.R. James' work and life. She argues that James articulated his attempt to produce radical discourses with a consistent methodology.

  •  
    565

    This exciting study of two discrete yet kindred areas gives an affirmative answer. It comes to terms with what many have considered distinct yet fluctuating boundaries that separate and bond southern peoples. These papers from the Chancellor's Symposium at the University of Mississippi in 1998 focus on and examine the strong connections.

  • - Minority Writers Resisting Whiteness
    av Stephen P. Knadler
    375,-

    Traces a long cultural and literary history of the ways African Americans, Asian Americans, Jewish Americans, Chicanos, gays, and lesbians have challenged the shape and meaning of so-called white identities.

  • - A Black Doctor's Civil Rights Struggle
    av Gilbert R. Mason
    375,-

    This book, the first to focus on the integration of the Gulf Coast, is Dr. Gilbert R. Mason's eyewitness account of harrowing episodes that occurred there during the civil rights movement. Newly opened by court order, documents from the Mississippi Sovereignty Commission's secret files enhance this riveting memoir.

  •  
    509

    The essays in Faulkner and the Craft of Fiction, first presented at the 1987 Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha Conference at the University of Mississippi, focus on Faulkner's narrative inventiveness, on how Faulkner, like his character Benjy in The Sound and the Fury, relentlessly kept "trying to say".

  • av Sw. Anand Prahlad
    509

    From slave times to the present the proverb has been a mainstay in African-American communication. This study of African-American proverbs is the first to probe deeply into these meanings and contexts.

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