Forgotten readers

recovering the lost history of African American literary societies

423 pages

English language

Published Feb. 18, 2002 by Duke University Press.

ISBN:
978-0-8223-2980-0
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Over the past decade the popularity of black writers including E. Lynn Harris and Terry McMillan has been hailed as an indication that an active African American reading public has come into being. Yet this is not a new trend; there is a vibrant history of African American literacy, literary associations, and book clubs. Forgotten Readers reveals that neglected past, looking at the reading practices of free blacks in the antebellum north and among African Americans following the Civil War. It places the black upper and middle classes within American literary history, illustrating how they used reading and literary conversation as a means to assert their civic identities and intervene in the political and literary cultures of the United States from which they were otherwise excluded. Forgotten Readers expands our definition of literacy and urges us to think of literature as broadly as it was conceived of in the nineteenth …

1 edition

Subjects

  • American literature -- African American authors -- Appreciation -- United States.
  • American literature -- African American authors -- History and criticism.
  • American literature -- 19th century -- History and criticism.
  • African Americans -- Intellectual life -- 19th century.
  • African Americans -- Books and reading.
  • African Americans in literature.
  • Literature -- Societies, etc.

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