• No shipping costs from € 15, -
  • Lists and tips from our own specialists
  • Possibility of ordering without an account
  • No shipping costs from € 15, -
  • Lists and tips from our own specialists
  • Possibility of ordering without an account

The Blacker the Berry

A Novel of Negro Life

Wallace Thurman

The Blacker the Berry
The Blacker the Berry

The Blacker the Berry

A Novel of Negro Life

Wallace Thurman

Hardback / bound | English
  • Available, delivery time is 10-15 working days
  • Not in stock in our shop
€18.50
  • From €15,- no shipping costs.
  • 30 days to change your mind and return physical products

Description

Wallace Thurman (1902 - 1934) was a Black novelist and figure of the Harlem Renaissance. Born in Salt Lake City, Thurman was a lifelong reader and writer who completed his first novel at ten and read the likes of Shakespeare, Havelock Ellis, and Charles Baudeliare. Moving to Harlem at the height of the Renaissance, Thurman had his hand in multiple literary productions such as The Messenger, World Tomorrow, and Fire!!!. A strong critic of the New Negro movement, Thurman found himself a part of the “Niggerati”—a group of Black artists and intellectuals who wanted to use their art to showcase African-American life as it authentically was whether good or bad—firmly against appealing to the Black middle class or the white gaze. Becoming one of the first Black readers at a major New York publishing house and experiencing prejudice on both sides of the color line, he felt moved to write The Blacker the Berry: A Novel of Negro Life and three years later, Infants of Spring. Said by Langston Hughes to be, "...a strangely brilliant black boy, who had read everything and whose critical mind could find something wrong with everything he read,” Thurman was a complex and important voice in the Harlem Renaissance.

Wallace Thurman (1902 - 1934) was a Black novelist and figure of the Harlem Renaissance. Born in Salt Lake City, Thurman was a lifelong reader and writer who completed his first novel at ten and read the likes of Shakespeare, Havelock Ellis, and Charles Baudeliare. Moving to Harlem at the height of the Renaissance, Thurman had his hand in multiple literary productions such as The Messenger, World Tomorrow, and Fire!!!. A strong critic of the New Negro movement, Thurman found himself a part of the “Niggerati”—a group of Black artists and intellectuals who wanted to use their art to showcase African-American life as it authentically was whether good or bad—firmly against appealing to the Black middle class or the white gaze. Becoming one of the first Black readers at a major New York publishing house and experiencing prejudice on both sides of the color line, he felt moved to write The Blacker the Berry: A Novel of Negro Life and three years later, Infants of Spring. Said by Langston Hughes to be, "...a strangely brilliant black boy, who had read everything and whose critical mind could find something wrong with everything he read,” Thurman was a complex and important voice in the Harlem Renaissance.

Specifications

  • Publisher
    West Margin Press
  • Pub date
    Sep 2022
  • Pages
    142
  • Theme
    Modern and contemporary fiction
  • Dimensions
    203 x 127 mm
  • EAN
    9781513138602
  • Hardback / bound
    Hardback / bound
  • Language
    English

related products

Je bent prachtig

Je bent prachtig

Ann Napolitano
€24.99
Al het blauw van de hemel

Al het blauw van de hemel

Mélissa Da Costa
€24.99
De onbedoelden

De onbedoelden

Cobi van Baars
€22.99
Open

Open

Philip Huff
€23.99
Demon Copperhead

Demon Copperhead

Barbara Kingsolver
€24.99
Ga je erover schrijven?

Ga je erover schrijven?

Herman Koch
€23.99