The African American roots of modernism : from Reconstruction to the Harlem Renaissance

Enregistré dans:
Détails bibliographiques
Auteur principal : Smethurst James Edward (Auteur)
Format : Livre
Langue : anglais
Titre complet : The African American roots of modernism : from Reconstruction to the Harlem Renaissance / James Smethurst
Publié : Chapel Hill : University of North Carolina Press , cop. 2011
Description matérielle : 1 vol. (X-252 p.)
Collection : The John Hope Franklin series in African American history and culture Waldo E. Martin Jr and Patricia Sullivan ed
Contenu : Introduction: new forms and captive knights in the age of Jim Crow and mechanical reproduction. Dueling banjos: African American dualism and strategies for Black representation at the turn of the century. Remembering "those noble sons of ham": poetry, soldiers, and citizens at the end of reconstruction. The Black city: the early Jim Crow migration narrative and the new territory of race. Somebody else's civilization: African American writers, bohemia, and the new poetry. A familiar and warm relationship: race, sexual freedom, and U.S. literary modernism
Sujets :
LEADER 02336nam a2200397 4500
001 PPN15568860X
005 20151013030500.0
010 |a 978-0-8078-7185-0  |b br. 
010 |a 0-8078-7185-0  |b br. 
020 |a US  |b 2010047552 
100 |a 20111017d2011 k |0frey0103 ba 
101 0 |a eng 
102 |a US 
105 |a y a 001yy 
106 |a r 
200 1 |a The African American roots of modernism  |b Texte imprimé  |e from Reconstruction to the Harlem Renaissance  |f James Smethurst 
210 |a Chapel Hill  |c University of North Carolina Press  |d cop. 2011 
215 |a 1 vol. (X-252 p.)  |d 24 cm 
225 0 |a The John Hope Franklin series in African American history and culture 
320 |a Bibliogr. p. [231]-245. Index 
327 1 |a Introduction: new forms and captive knights in the age of Jim Crow and mechanical reproduction  |a Dueling banjos: African American dualism and strategies for Black representation at the turn of the century  |a Remembering "those noble sons of ham": poetry, soldiers, and citizens at the end of reconstruction  |a The Black city: the early Jim Crow migration narrative and the new territory of race  |a Somebody else's civilization: African American writers, bohemia, and the new poetry  |a A familiar and warm relationship: race, sexual freedom, and U.S. literary modernism 
410 | |0 060224991  |t The John Hope Franklin series in African American history and culture  |b Texte imprimé  |f Waldo E. Martin Jr and Patricia Sullivan ed  |c Chapel Hill  |n The University of North Carolina Press 
606 |3 PPN027236714  |a Littérature américaine  |x Auteurs noirs américains  |3 PPN02779038X  |x Histoire et critique  |2 rameau 
606 |3 PPN02735864X  |a Ségrégation  |3 PPN028054679  |x Dans la littérature  |2 rameau 
606 |3 PPN032861753  |a Noirs américains  |x Ségrégation  |2 rameau 
606 |3 PPN027805220  |a Noirs américains  |3 PPN027255670  |x Vie intellectuelle  |3 PPN027794059  |z 19e siècle  |2 rameau 
606 |3 PPN027805220  |a Noirs américains  |3 PPN027255670  |x Vie intellectuelle  |3 PPN086305646  |z 20e siècle  |2 rameau 
676 |a 810.9/896073  |v 22 
680 |a PS153.N5  |b S555 2011 
700 1 |3 PPN092109020  |a Smethurst  |b James Edward  |4 070 
801 3 |a FR  |b Abes  |c 20111017  |g AFNOR 
801 0 |b DLC  |g AACR2 
801 2 |b YDX  |g AACR2 
930 |5 441092102:435067834  |b 441092102  |j u 
979 |a LET 
998 |a 612341