Slaveroad By John Edgar Wideman
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Major literary figure and master of language The New York Times John Edgar Wideman uses his unique generational perspective to explore what he calls the slaveroad a daunting haunting reality that runs throughout American history John Edgar Wideman s slaveroad is a palimpsest of physical social and psychological terrain the great expanse to which he writes in this groundbreaking work that unsettles the boundaries of memoir history and fiction The slaveroad begins with the Atlantic Ocean across which enslaved Africans were carried but the term comes to encompass the journeys and experiences of Black Americans since then and the many insidious ways that slavery separates wounds and persists In a section of Slaveroad called Sheppard William Henry Sheppard a descendant of enslaved Virginians travels back to Africa where he works as a missionary converting Africans to Christianity alongside his Southern white colleague Wideman imagines drinking afternoon tea with Lucy Gant Sheppard William s wife who was on her own slaveroad as she experienced her husband s adultery with the African women he was trying to convert In Penn Station Wideman s brother after being confined forty four years in prison travels from Pittsburgh to New York As Wideman awaits his brother he asks How will I distinguish my brother from the dead Dead passengers on the slaveroad An impassioned searching work Slaveroad is one man s reckoning with a uniquely American lineage and the ways that the past haunts the It s here Now Where we are What we are A story compounded of stories told retold untold not told SlaveroadA widely celebrated writer and the winner of many literary awards he is the first to win the International PEN Faulkner Award twice in 1984 for Sent for You Yesterday and in 1990 for Philadelphia Fire In 2000 he won the O Henry Award for his short story Weight published in The Callaloo Journal. Silver oak student portal com Stories from the book have already been selected for the O Henry Prize for 2010 and the Best African American Fiction 2010 award His nonfiction book Brothers and Keepers received a National Book Award He grew up in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA and much of his writing is set there especially in the Homewood neighborhood of the East End He graduated fr A widely celebrated writer and the winner of many literary awards he is the first to win the International PEN Faulkner Award twice in 1984 for Sent for You Yesterday and in 1990 for Philadelphia Fire In 2000 he won the O Henry Award for his short story Weight published in The Callaloo Journal. Slave roblox game com Stories from the book have already been selected for the O Henry Prize for 2010 and the Best African American Fiction 2010 award His nonfiction book Brothers and Keepers received a National Book Award He grew up in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA and much of his writing is set there especially in the Homewood neighborhood of the East End He graduated from Pittsburgh s Peabody High School then attended the University of Pennsylvania where he became an All Ivy League forward on the basketball team He was the second African American to win a Rhodes Scholarship New College Oxford University England graduating in 1966 He also graduated from the University of Iowa Writers Workshop. Slaveroad pdf Critics Circle nomination and his memoir Fatheralong was a finalist for the National Book Award He is also the recipient of a MacArthur genius grant Wideman was chosen as winner of the Rea Award for the Short Story in 1998 for outstanding achievement in that genre In 1997 his novel The Cattle Killing won the James Feni Cooper Prize for Best Historical Fiction. Slaveroad booker He has taught at the University of Wyoming University of Pennsylvania where he founded and chaired the African American Studies Department and the University of Massachusetts at Amherst s MFA Program for Poets Writers He currently teaches at Brown University and he sits on the contributing editorial board of the literary journal Conjunctions site_link A series of interconnected essays or a collection of thoughts across different days a lyric poem told in prose or a fictional narrative about real people in which time is flattened and expanded shuffled and become non existent Wideman allows his readers entry into his mind a jumble with references and ideas thoughts and musings about what it means to live in a time of tyranny here in the 21st century and in the 19th and in the 17th a time of unending tyranny and a time of trying to fathom the methods of survival A song of the unsung uncounted and of the known and revered who all walk the slaveroad that was birthed in the minds of one people who told a story of superiority and it was believed down through recorded history Impossible to unmake yet impossible to live upon this paradox poisons everyone on the slaveroad which is everyone on the earth To be sure answers cannot be found compassion is equally met with hatred and so not much can change There is hope as much as there is pessimism and yet we have no choice but to continue onward Step by cautious step along the slaveroad which perhaps one day might no longer be known as such Though by then these words will have been forgotten And perhaps the better we will be for it 9781668057216
Slaveroad By John Edgar Wideman |
1668057212 |
9781668057216 |
English |
224 |
Hardcover |
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