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THE NORTON ANTHOLOGY OF AFRICAN AMERICAN LITERATUREPDF|Epub|txt|kindle电子书版本下载
- HENRY LOUIS GATES NELLIE Y.MCKAY 著
- 出版社: W.W.NORTON & COMPANY
- ISBN:
- 出版时间:1997
- 标注页数:2665页
- 文件大小:730MB
- 文件页数:2708页
- 主题词:
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图书目录
THE VERNACULAR TRADITION5
[Entries marked·are included on the Audio Companion]5
SPIRITUALS5
Were You There When They Crucified My Lord?7
City Called Heaven8
God’s A-Gonna Trouble the Water8
Walk Together Children9
I Know Moon-Rise9
I’m A-Rollin’10
I Been Rebuked and I Been Scorned10
Didn’t My Lord Deliver Daniel?10
Soon I Will Be Done11
No More Auction Block12
Swing Low,Sweet Chariot13
Steal Away to Jesus13
Go Down,Moses14
Been in the Storm So Long14
Oh,Freedom!15
GOSPEL16
This Little Light of Mine17
Down by the Riverside18
Freedom in the Air20
Take My Hand,Precious Lord20
Peace Be Still21
Stand by Me21
THE BLUES22
Yellow Dog Blues23
St.Louis Blues24
Beale Street Blues25
Down-Hearted Blues26
See,See Rider27
Prove It on Me Blues27
Gulf Coast Blues28
Trouble in Mind29
Backwater Blues29
In the House Blues30
How Long Blues31
Hellhound on My Trail31
It’s a Low Down Dirty Shame32
Good Morning,Blues33
Sent for You Yesterday34
Going to Chicago Blues34
Fine and Mellow34
Hoochie Coochie35
Sunnyland36
SECULAR RHYMES AND SONGS,BALLADS,AND WORK SONGS37
SECULAR RHYMES AND SONGS38
[We raise de wheat]38
Me and My Captain38
Promises of Freedom39
Jack and Dinah Want Freedom39
Run,Nigger,Run40
Learn to Count40
Another Man Done Gone40
You May Go But This Will Bring You Back41
BALLADS41
Poor Lazarus41
The Signifying Monkey42
Wild Negro Bill44
John Henry45
Frankie and Johnny48
Railroad Bill49
Stackolee50
Sinking of the Titanic51
Shine and the Titanic51
WORK SONGS52
Pick a Bale of Cotton52
Go Down,Old Hannah53
Can’t You Line It?54
JAZZ55
Andy Razaf:(What Did I Do to Be So) Black and Blue?57
Duke Ellington:It Don’t Mean a Thing (If It Ain’t Got That Swing)58
King Pleasure:Parker’s Mood59
RAP60
Gil Scott-Heron:The Revolution Will Not Be Televised61
Grandmaster Flash & the Furious Five:The Message62
Public Enemy:Don’t Believe the Hype65
Queen Latifah:The Evil That Men Do68
SERMONS69
God71
C.L.Franklin:The Eagle Stirreth Her Nest71
Zora Neale Hurston:[Faith hasn’t got no eyes]78
Martin Luther King:I Have a Dream80
Martin Luther King:I’ve Been to the Mountaintop83
Malcolm Ⅹ:The Ballot or the Bullet90
FOLKTALES102
All God’s Chillen Had Wings103
Big Talk105
Deer Hunting Story106
How to Write a Letter107
“’Member Youse a Nigger”107
“Ah’ll Beatcher Makin’ Money”108
Why the Sister in Black Works Hardest111
Why Women Always Take Advantage of Men111
“De Reason Niggers Is Working So Hard”114
The Ventriloquist114
You Talk Too Much,Anyhow115
The King Buzzard116
A Flying Fool117
Bur Rabbit in Red Hill Churchyard118
Brer Rabbit Tricks Brer Fox Again119
The Wonderful Tar-Baby Story120
How Mr.Rabbit Was Too Sharp for Mr.Fox121
The Awful Fate of Mr.Wolf123
What the Rabbit Learned125
THE LITERATURE OF SLAVERY AND FREEDOM:1746—1865127
LUCY TERRY (c.1730—1821)137
Bars Fight137
OLAUDAH EQUIANO (c.1745—1797)138
The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano,or Gustavus Vassa,the African,Written by Himself140
Volume Ⅰ140
Chapter Ⅰ141
Chapter Ⅱ151
From Chapter Ⅲ161
From Chapter Ⅳ164
PHILLIS WHEATLEY (1753?—1784)164
POEMS ON VARIOUS SUBJECTS,RELIGIOUS AND MORAL167
Preface167
[Letter Sent by the Author’s Master to the Publisher]167
[To the Publick]168
To Maecenas169
To the University of Cambridge,in New-England170
On Being Brought from Africa to America171
On the Death of the Rev.Mr.George Whitefield.1770171
To the Right Honourable William,Earl of Dartmouth172
On Imagination173
ToS.M.,a Young African Painter,on Seeing His Works175
To Samson Occom176
To His Excellency General Washington176
DAVID WALKER (1785—1830)178
David Walker’s Appeal in Four Articles; Together with a Preamble,to the Coloured Citizens of the World179
Preamble179
Article Ⅰ.Our Wretchedness in Consequence of Slavery182
GEORGE MOSES HORTON (1797?—1883?)190
The Lover’s Farewell191
On Hearing of the Intention of a Gentleman to Purchase the Poet’s Freedom192
Division of an Estate193
The Creditor to His Proud Debtor194
George Moses Horton,Myself195
SOJOURNER TRUTH (1797—1883)196
Ar’n’t I a Woman?Speech to the Women’s Rights Convention in Akron,Ohio,1851198
From The Anti-Slavery Bugle,June 21,1851198
From The Narrative of Sojourner Truth,1878199
MARIA W.STEWART (1803—1879)201
Religion and the Pure Principles of Morality,the Sure Foundation on Which We Must Build202
Introduction202
Lecture Delivered at the Franklin Hall204
HARRIET JACOBS (c.1813—1897)207
Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl209
Preface209
Ⅰ.Childhood210
Ⅱ.The New Master and Mistress212
Ⅴ.The Trials of Girlhood216
Ⅹ.A Perilous Passage in the Slave Girl’s Life218
ⅪⅤ.Another Link to Life222
ⅩⅦ.The Flight224
ⅩⅪ.The Loophole of Retreat226
ⅩⅩⅨ.Preparations for Escape229
ⅩⅩⅩⅨ.The Confession235
ⅩL.The Fugitive Slave Law236
ⅩLⅠ.Free at Last240
WILLIAM WELLS BROWN (1814?—1884)245
Narrative of William W.Brown,a Fugitive Slave247
Chapter Ⅴ247
From Chapter Ⅵ249
Clotel; or,The President’s Daughter255
Chapter Ⅰ.The Negro Sale255
Chapter Ⅱ.Going to the South261
Chapter Ⅳ.The Quadroon’s Home265
Chapter ⅩⅤ.To-Day a Mistress,To-Morrow a Slave267
Chapter ⅩⅨ.Escape of Clotel269
ADA [SARAH L.FORTEN] (1814—1898?)277
Lines Suggested on Reading “An Appeal to Christian Women of the South,” by A.E.Grimke277
HENRY HIGHLAND GARNET (1815—1882)279
An Address to the Slaves of the United States of America280
VICTOR SEJOUR (1817—1874)286
The Mulatto287
FREDERICK DOUGLASS (1818—1895)299
Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass,an American Slave,Written by Himself302
My Bondage and My Freedom369
Chapter ⅩⅩⅢ.Introduced to the Abolitionists369
Chapter ⅩⅩⅣ.Twenty-One Months in Great Britain373
From What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July?:An Address Delivered in Rochester,New York,on 5 July 1852379
Life and Times of Frederick Douglass391
Second Part From Chapter ⅩⅤ.Weighed in the Balance391
Third Part Chapter Ⅰ.Later Life397
JAMES M.WHITFIELD (1822—1871)401
America402
Yes! Strike Again That Sounding String405
Self-Reliance406
FRANCES E.W.HARPER (1825—1911)408
Ethiopia412
Eliza Harris412
The Slave Mother414
Vashti415
Bury Me in a Free Land417
Aunt Chloe’s Politics418
Learning to Read418
A Double Standard419
Songs for the People421
An Appeal to My Country Women422
The Two Offers423
Our Greatest Want431
Fancy Etchings432
[Enthusiasm and Lofty Aspirations]432
[Dangerous Economies]434
Woman’s Political Future436
HARRIET E.WILSON (1828?—1863?)439
Our Nig; or,Sketches from the Life of a Free Black,in a Two-StoWhite House,North441
Preface441
Chapter Ⅰ.Mag Smith,My Mother441
Chapter Ⅱ.My Father’s Death444
Chapter Ⅲ.A New Home for Me447
From Chapter ⅤⅢ.Visitor and Departure452
ChapterⅩ.Perplexities.—Another Death455
ChapterⅫ.The Winding Up of the Matter458
LITERATURE OF THE RECONSTRUCTION TO THE NEW NEGRO RENAISSANCE:1865—1919461
CHARLOTTE FORTEN GRIMKE (1837—1914)472
A Parting Hymn473
Journals474
From Journal One474
From Journal Three480
BOOKER T.WASHINGTON (1856—1915)488
Up From Slavery490
Chapter Ⅰ.A Slave among Slaves490
Chapter Ⅱ.Boyhood Days498
Chapter Ⅲ.The Struggle for an Education505
Chapter ⅩⅣ.The Atlanta Exposition Address513
CHARLES W.CHESNUTT (1858—1932)522
The Goophered Grapevine523
The Passing of Grandison532
The Wife of His Youth545
ANNA JULIA COOPER (1858?—1964)553
Womanhood a Vital Element in the Regeneration and Progress of a Race554
PAULINE E.HOPKINS (1859—1930)569
Contending Forces570
Chapter Ⅷ.The Sewing-Circle570
Chapter ⅩⅤ.Will Smith’s Defense of His Race577
Famous Men of the Negro Race581
Booker T.Washington581
Famous Women of the Negro Race588
Literary Workers (Frances E.W.Harper)588
Letter from Cordelia A.Condict and Pauline Hopkins’s Reply(March 1903)593
IDA B.WELLS-BARNETT (1862—1931)595
A Red Record596
Chapter Ⅰ.The Case Stated596
Chapter Ⅹ.The Remedy602
W.E.B.DU BOIS (1868—1963)606
A Litany of Atlanta609
The Song of the Smoke612
The Souls of Black Folk613
The Damnation of Women740
Criteria of Negro Art752
Two Novels759
JAMES D.CORROTHERS (1869—1917)760
The Snapping of the Bow762
Me ’n’ Dunbar763
Paul Laurence Dunbar764
At the Closed Gate of Justice764
An Indignation Dinner765
JAMES WELDON JOHNSON (1871—1938)766
Sence You Went Away768
Lift Ev’ry Voice and Sing768
O Black and Unknown Bards769
Fifty Years770
Brothers773
The Creation775
My City777
The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man777
The Book of American Negro Poetry861
Preface861
PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR (1872—1906)884
Ode to Ethiopia886
Worn Out887
A Negro Love Song888
The Colored Soldiers889
An Ante-Bellum Sermon891
Ere Sleep Comes Down to Soothe the Weary Eyes893
Not They Who Soar894
When Malindy Sings894
We Wear the Mask896
Little Brown Baby897
Her Thought and His897
A Cabin Tale898
Sympathy900
Dinah Kneading Dough901
The Haunted Oak901
Douglass903
Philosophy903
Black Samson of Brandywine904
The Poet905
The Fourth of July and Race Outrages905
SUTTON E.GRIGGS (1872—1933)906
The Hindered Hand; or,The Reign of the Repressionist908
Chapter ⅪⅩ.The Fugitives Flee Again908
Chapter ⅩⅩ.The Blaze911
ALICE MOORE DUNBAR NELSON (1875—1935)914
Violets915
I Sit and Sew916
April Is on the Way916
Violets918
WILLIAM STANLEY BRAITHWAITE (1878—1962)919
The Watchers920
The House of Falling Leaves921
Sic Vita922
Turn Me to My Yellow Leaves923
Quiet Has a Hidden Sound923
FENTON JOHNSON (1888—1958)924
Singing Hallelujia925
Song of the Whirlwind926
My God in Heaven Said to Me926
The Lonely Mother927
Tired928
The Scarlet Woman928
HARLEM RENAISSANCE:1919—1940929
ARTHUR A.SCHOMBURG (1874—1938)937
The Negro Digs Up His Past937
ANGELINA WELD GRIMKE (1880—1958)943
A Winter Twilight944
The Black Finger944
For the Candle Light944
When the Green Lies Over the Earth944
Tenebris945
ANNE SPENCER (1882—1975)946
Before the Feast of Shushan947
Dunbar948
At the Carnival948
Lady,Lady949
Letter to My Sister949
The Wife-Woman950
JESSIE REDMON FAUSET (c.1884—1961)951
Plum Bun:A Novel without a Moral952
From Home952
Chapter Ⅰ[Black Philadelphia]952
Chapter Ⅱ [Sundays]957
ALAIN LOCKE (1886—1954)960
The New Negro961
GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON (1886—1966)970
The Heart of a Woman971
Youth971
My Little Dreams971
Lost Illusions972
I Want to Die While You Love Me972
MARCUS GARVEY (1887—1940)972
Africa for the Africans974
The Future as I See It977
CLAUDE MCKAY (1889—1948)981
Harlem Shadows984
If We Must Die984
To the White Fiends984
Africa985
America985
My Mother986
Enslaved986
The White House986
Outcast987
St.Isaac’s Church,Petrograd987
Home to Harlem988
Chapter ⅩⅦ.He Also Loved988
Harlem Runs Wild993
ZORA NEALE HURSTON (1891—1960)996
Sweat999
How It Feels to Be Colored Me1008
The Gilded Six-Bits1011
Characteristics of Negro Expression1019
Mules and Men1032
[Negro Folklore]1032
Their Eyes Were Watching God1041
Chapter 1 [The Return]1041
Chapter 2 [Pear Tree]1045
Dust Tracks on a Road1050
Chapter Ⅹ.Research1050
NELLA LARSEN (1893—1964)1065
Quicksand1066
Chapter 12 [To Denmark]1066
Chapter 13 [New Life]1069
Chapter 14 [Talk of Marriage]1073
Chapter 15 [Proposal]1078
Chapter 16 [Good-Bye]1084
JEAN TOOMER (1894—1967)1087
Cane1089
GEORGE SAMUEL SCHUYLER (1895—1977)1170
The Negro-Art Hokum1171
RUDOLPH FISHER (1897—1934)1174
The City of Refuge1175
The Caucasian Storms Harlem1187
ERIC WALROND (1898—1966)1195
The Wharf Rats1196
MARITA BONNER (1899—1971)1205
On Being Young—a Woman—and Colored1206
STERLING A.BROWN (1901—1989)1210
Odyssey of Big Boy1211
Long Gone1212
Southern Road1213
Strong Men1215
Memphis Blues1216
Slim Greer1218
Tin Roof Blues1220
Ma Rainey1220
Cabaret1222
Sporting Beasley1224
Sam Smiley1225
GWENDOLYN B.BENNETT (1902—1981)1226
Heritage1227
To a Dark Girl1228
Sonnet —21228
Hatred1229
WALLACE THURMAN (1902—1934)1229
Infants of the Spring1231
Chapter ⅩⅪ [Harlem Salon]1231
ARNA BONTEMPS (1902—1973)1239
Golgotha Is a Mountain1240
A Black Man Talks of Reaping1242
Nocturne at Bethesda1242
Southern Mansion1244
Miracles1244
A Summer Tragedy1244
LANGSTON HUGHES (1902—1967)1251
The Negro Speaks of Rivers1254
Mother to Son1254
Danse Africaine1255
Jazzonia1255
When Sue Wears Red1256
Dream Variations1256
The Weary Blues1257
I Too1258
A House in Taos1258
Homesick Blues1259
Po’ Boy Blues1260
Gypsy Man1260
Lament over Love1261
Red Silk Stockings1262
Bad Man1262
Song for a Dark Girl1262
Gal’s Cry for a Dying Lover1263
Hard Daddy1263
Sylvester’s Dying Bed1264
Ballad of the Landlord1265
Juke Box Love Song1266
Dream Boogie1266
Harlem1267
Motto1267
The Negro Artist and the Racial Mountain1267
The Blues I’m Playing1271
The Big Sea1282
When the Negro Was in Vogue1282
Harlem Literati1289
Downtown1293
The Best of Simple1297
Feet Live Their Own Life1297
A Toast to Harlem1299
Jealousy1301
COUNTEE CULLEN (1903—1946)1303
Yet Do I Marvel1305
Tableau1305
Incident1306
Saturday’s Child1306
The Shroud of Color1307
Heritage1311
To John Keats,Poet at Spring Time1314
From the Dark Tower1315
HELENE JOHNSON (1907—1995)1315
Poem1316
Sonnet to a Negro in Harlem1317
Remember Not1317
Invocation1317
REALISM,NATURALISM,MODERNISM:1940—19601319
MELVIN B.TOLSON (1900?—1966)1328
An Ex-Judge at the Bar1330
Dark Symphony1331
A Legend of Versailles1334
Libretto for the Republic of Liberia1335
The Birth of John Henry1357
Satchmo1358
DOROTHY WEST (1907—1998)1358
The Living Is Easy1359
Part One1359
Chapter 1.[Cleo]1359
Chapter 2.[Cleo’s High Jinks]1363
Chapter 3.[Cleo Goes North]1370
RICHARD WRIGHT (1908—1960)1376
Blueprint for Negro Writing1380
The Ethics of Living Jim Crow,an Autobiographical Sketch1388
Long Black Song1397
The Man Who Lived Underground1414
Black Boy1450
Chapter ⅩⅢ.[Booklist]1450
Chapter ⅩⅥ.[Chicago]1457
CHESTER B.HIMES (1909—1984)1467
Salute to the Passing1468
ANN PETRY (1911—1997)1476
Like a Winding Sheet1478
The Street1484
Chapter Ⅰ.[The Apartment]1484
ROBERT HAYDEN (1913—1982)1497
The Diver1499
Homage to the Empress of the Blues1500
Middle Passage1501
O Daedalus,Fly Away Home1505
Runagate Runagate1506
Frederick Douglass1508
A Ballad of Remembrance1509
Mourning Poem for the Queen of Sunday1510
Soledad1511
El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz1512
A Letter from Phillis Wheatley1514
RALPH ELLISON (1914—1994)1515
Invisible Man1518
Prologue1518
Chapter 1.[Battle Royal]1525
Epilogue1535
Change the Joke and Slip the Yoke1541
The World and the Jug1549
MARGARET WALKER (b.1915)1571
For My People1572
Poppa Chicken1574
For Malcolm Ⅹ1575
Prophets for a New Day1575
GWENDOLYN BROOKS (b.1917)1577
kitchenette building1579
the mother1579
a song in the front yard1580
Sadie and Maud1580
the vacant lot1581
the preacher:ruminates behind the sermon1581
The Sundays of Satin-Legs Smith1582
Maxie Allen1585
The Rites for Cousin Vit1586
The Children of the Poor1589
The Lovers of the Poor1591
We Real Cool1591
The Chicago Defender Sends a Man to Little Rock1593
A Lovely Love1593
Malcolm Ⅹ1594
Two Dedications1596
Riot1597
The Third Sermon on the Warpland1599
Young Heroes1601
when you have forgotten Sunday:the love story1602
Maud Martha1650
JAMES BALDWIN (1924—1987)1654
Everybody’s Protest Novel1659
Many Thousands Gone1670
Stranger in the Village1679
Notes of a Native Son1694
Sonny’s Blues1717
BOB KAUFMAN (1925—1986)1718
Walking Parker Home1718
Grandfather Was Queer,Too1719
Jail Poems1723
Unanimity Has Been Achieved,Not a Dot Less for Its Accidentalness1724
War Memoir:Jazz,Don’t Listen to It at Your Own Risk1725
LORRAINE HANSBERRY (1930—1965)1728
A Raisin in the Sun1791
THE BLACK ARTS MOVEMENT:1960—19701791
MARI EVANS1806
Status Symbol1807
I Am a Black Woman1808
HOYT FULLER (1923—1981)1809
Towards a Black Aesthetic1810
MALCOLM X (El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz) (1925—1965)1816
The Autobiography of Malcolm Ⅹ1817
Chapter 11.Saved1817
JOHN ALFRED WILLIAMS (b.1925)1833
The Man Who Cried I Am1834
1.[In an Outdoor Cafe]1834
2.[Memories,Margrit,and Morphine]1840
3.[Picture of the Writer]1849
MARTIN LUTHER KING JR.(1929—1968)1853
Letter from Birmingham Jail15861854
ETHERIDGE KNIGHT (1931—1985)1866
The Idea of Ancestry1867
Hard Rock Returns to Prison from the Hospital for the Criminal Insane1868
For Black Poets Who Think of Suicide1869
ADDISON GAYLE JR.(1932—1991)1869
The Black Aesthetic1870
Introduction1870
AMIRI BARAKA (b.1934)1877
Preface to a Twenty Volume Suicide Note1879
In Memory of Radio1880
A Poem for Black Hearts1881
I don’t love you1881
Three Movements and a Coda1882
SOS1883
Black Art1883
The Invention of Comics1884
Dutchman1885
The Revolutionary Theatre1899
SONIA SANCHEZ (b.1934)1902
homecoming1903
poem at thirty1903
for our lady1904
Summer Words of a Sistuh Addict1905
A Blues Book for Blue Black Magical Women1905
Part Three1905
Present1905
ED BULLINS (b.1935)1907
Goin’a Buffalo:A Tragifantasy1908
ELDRIDGE CLEAVER (b.1935)1946
Soul on Ice1947
The Primeval Mitosis1947
A.B.SPELLMAN (b.1935)1955
Did John’s Music Kill Him?1955
JAYNE CORTEZ (b.1936)1956
How Long Has Trane Been Gone1957
LARRY NEAL (1937—1981)1959
The Black Arts Movement1960
MAULANA KARENGA (b.1941)1972
Black Art:Mute Matter Given Force and Function1973
HAKI R.MADHUBUTI (b.1942)1977
Back Again,Home1978
Introduction [to Think Black]1978
The Long Reality1979
Malcolm Spoke / who listened?1980
a poem to complement other poems1981
NIKKI GIOVANNI (b.1943)1982
For Saundra1983
Beautiful Black Men1984
Nikki-Rosa1984
JAMES ALAN MCPHERSON (b.1943)1985
A Solo Song:For Doc1986
QUINCY TROUPE (b.1943)2002
In Texas Grass2003
Conversation Overheard2004
Impressions / of Chicago; For Howlin’ Wolf2006
CAROLYN M.RODGERS (b.1945)2007
Jesus Was Crucified2007
It Is Deep2009
For Sistuhs Wearin’ Straight Hair2010
LITERATURE SINCE 19702011
ALBERT MURRAY (b.1916)2021
Train Whistle Guitar2023
[History Lessons]2023
MAYA ANGELOU (b.1928)2037
Still I Rise2039
My Arkansas2040
I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings2040
Chapter 15.[Mrs.Flowers]2040
Chapter 16.[“Mam”]2046
PAULE MARSHALL (b.1929)2050
Reena2052
To Da-Duh,in Memoriam2065
The Making of a Writer:From the Poets in the Kitchen2072
ADRIENNE KENNEDY (b.1931)2079
A Movie Star Has to Star in Black and White2081
TONI MORRISON (b.1931)2094
Sula2098
ERNEST J.GAINES (b.1933)2180
The Sky Is Gray2182
AUDRE LORDE (1934—1992)2203
Father Son and Holy Ghost2204
The Winds of Orisha2205
Coal2207
Now That I Am Forever with Child2207
A Litany for Survival2208
The Evening News2209
Poetry Is Not a Luxury2210
COLLEEN MCELROY (b.1935)2212
Pike Street Bus2213
The Griots Who Know Brer Fox2214
Tapestries2216
Caledonia2218
LUCILLE CLIFTON (b.1936)2219
[the bodies broken on]2220
the lost baby poem2221
prayer2222
malcolm2222
[Kali]2222
[if mama / could see]2223
homage to my hips2223
[what spells raccoon to me]2224
1.at jonestown2224
[a woman who loves]2224
wishes for sons2225
move2226
JUNE JORDAN (b.1936)2227
In Memoriam:Martin Luther King,Jr.2229
I Must Become a Menace to My Enemies2230
Poem about My Rights2231
Poem for Guatemala2234
The Female and the Silence of a Man2235
Intifada2236
A New Politics of Sexuality2238
CLARENCE MAJOR (b.1936)2241
Swallow the Lake2243
Round Midnight2244
On Watching a Caterpillar Become a Butterfly2246
Chicago Heat2247
LEON FORREST (1937—1997)2250
There Is a Tree More Ancient Than Eden2252
The Epistle of Sweetie Reed2252
MICHAEL S.HARPER (b.1938)2275
Dear John,Dear Coltrane2277
Deathwatch2278
Here Where Coltrane Is2279
Br’er Sterling and the Rocker2280
Grandfather2280
“Goin’ to the Territory”2282
In Hayden’s Collage2283
The Ghost of Soul-Making2284
ISHMAEL REED (b.1938)2285
I am a cowboy in the boat of Ra2286
Railroad Bill,a Conjure Man2288
Dualism:In Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man2292
Chattanooga2293
Oakland Blues2296
Neo-HooDoo Manifesto2297
Mumbo Jumbo2301
Chapters 1—22301
TONI CADE BAMBARA (1939—1995)2305
Raymond’s Run2307
AL YOUNG (b.1939)2313
A Dance for Ma Rainey2314
Conjugal Visits2315
The Seduction of Light2317
2A.[Ben Franklin]2317
3.[Secondhand Business]2322
JOHN EDGAR WIDEMAN (b.1941)2325
Brothers and Keepers2328
[Robby’s Version]2328
Damballah2335
SAMUEL R.DELANY (b.1942)2342
Atlantis:Model 1924 [d]2343
SHERLEYANNE WILLIAMS (1944—1999)2361
The Peacock Poems:12363
I Want Aretha to Set This to Music2363
Tell Martha Not to Moan2365
ALICE WALKER (b.1944)2375
Women2377
Outcast2378
On Stripping Bark from Myself2379
“Good Night,Willie Lee,I’ll See You in the Morning”2380
In Search of Our Mothers’ Gardens2380
Everyday Use2387
Advancing Luna—and Ida B.Wells2394
The Color Purple2405
[God Love All Them Feelings]2406
AUGUST WILSON (b.1945)2409
Fences2411
MICHELLE CLIFF (b.1946)2462
Within the Veil2463
Columba2466
WANDA COLEMAN (b.1946)2472
Emmett Till2473
Today I Am a Homicide in the North of the City2476
be quiet.go away2477
At the Record Hop2477
American Sonnet (10)2478
Bedtime Story2478
Mastectonmy2479
OCTAVIA BUTLER (b.1947)2479
Bloodchild2480
YUSEF KOMUNYAKAA (b.1947)2495
Februarv in Svdnev2495
Facing It2496
Sunday Afternoons2496
Banking Potatoes2497
Birds on a Powerline2498
NATHANIEL MACKEY (b.1947)2499
Falso Brilhante2500
Song of the Andoumboulou:82501
Djbot Baghostus’s Run 26.Ⅸ.812502
CHARLES JOHNSON (b.1948)2507
The Education of Mingo2509
NTOZAKE SHANGE (b.1948)2518
From for colored girls who have considered suicide/when the rainbow is enuf2519
Nappy Edges2521
Bocas:A Daughter’s Geography2523
JAMAICA KINCAID (b.1949)2524
Annie John2526
Chapter Two.The Circling Hand2526
DAVID BRADLEY (b.1950)2535
The Chaneysville Incident2536
[Old Jack]2536
GLORIA NAYLOR (b.1950)2542
The Women of Brewster Place2544
The Two2544
TERRY MCMILLAN (b.1951)2571
Quilting on the Rebound2572
RITA DOVE (b.1952)2582
David Walker (1785—1830)2584
Parsley2585
Receiving the Stigmata2587
THOMAS AND BEULAH2587
The Event2587
Motherhood2588
Daystar2589
The Oriental Ballerina2589
Pastoral2591
MOTHER LOVE2591
Persephone Abducted2591
Statistic:The Witness2592
Mother Love2592
Demeter Mourning2593
History2593
Demeter’s Prayer to Hades2594
WALTER MOSLEY (b.1952)2594
Devil in a Blue Dress2596
Chapter 1.[DeWitt Albright]2596
Chapter 2.[Joppy]2598
Chapter 3.[Daphne Monet]2601
ESSEX HEMPHILL (1957—1995)2608
Conditions2609
ⅩⅪ2609
ⅩⅫ2610
ⅩⅩⅣ2610
TIMELINE:AFRICAN AMERICAN LITERATURE IN CONTEXT2612
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHIES2625
PERMISSIONS ACKNOWLEDGMENTS2649
INDEX2657