Charles W. Chesnutt Stories, Novels and Essays by Charles W. Chesnutt, Werner Sollors (Noted by)

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: January 2002
  • 939pp
  • Sales Rank: 228,155
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: January 2002
    • Publisher: Library of America
    • Format: Hardcover, 939pp
    • Sales Rank: 228,155

    Synopsis

    Rejecting his era's genteel hypocrisy about miscegenation, lynching, and "passing," Charles W. Chesnutt broke new ground in American literature with his innovative explorations of racial identity and use of African-American speech and folklore. Chesnutt exposed the deformed logic of the Jim Crow system-creating, in the process, the modern African-American novel. Here is the best of Chesnutt's fiction and nonfiction in the largest and most comprehensive edition ever published, featuring a newly researched chronology of the writer's life.

    The Conjure Woman (1899) introduced Chesnutt to the public as a writer of "conjure" tales, stories that explore black folklore and supernaturalism. That same year, he published The Wife of His Youth, and Other Stories of the Color Line, stories set in Chesnutt's native North Carolina that dramatize the legacies of slavery and Reconstruction at the turn of the century. His first novel, The House Behind the Cedars (1900), is a study of racial passing. The Marrow of Tradition (1901), Chesnutt's masterpiece, is a powerful and bitter novel about the harsh reassertion of white dominance in a southern town at the end of the Reconstruction era.

    Nine uncollected short stories round out the volume's fiction, including conjure tales omitted from The Conjure Woman and two stories that are unavailable in any other edition. Eight essays highlight his prescient views on the paradoxes of race relations in America and the definition of race itself.

    Library Journal

    Chesnutt is credited with being the first author to develop African American characters in stories and novels of literary worth, through the use of authentic speech and folklore. This volume collects his best-known works, including a few nonfiction pieces (he was a reporter before taking up fiction). It also sports the first chronology of his life. Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

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