East Baton Rouge Parish Library

The New Negro in the Old South, Gabriel A. Briggs

Label
The New Negro in the Old South, Gabriel A. Briggs
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Illustrations
mapsillustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
The New Negro in the Old South
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
910981644
Responsibility statement
Gabriel A. Briggs
Series statement
American literaures initiative
Summary
"The New Negro in the Old South redefines our understanding of the idea of the New Negro by following its genealogy back to its historical and geographical origins in the post-Reconstruction nineteenth-century South, where it looks at the literary and cultural factors that influenced the development of a modern African American, and ultimately, a New Negro identity. In this context, Briggs makes a compelling case that nineteenth-century, postbellum Nashville provided the locus of the economic, intellectual, social, and political concepts that shaped the strands of African American cultural and intellectual identity that consolidated around the term 'the New Negro' in the early twentieth century. In addition to fresh critical perspectives on such figures as W.E.B. Du Bois and Sutton Griggs, The New Negro in the Old South reexamines forgotten strands of New Negro cultural history, including turn-of-the-century southern streetcar strikes and black college rebellions. He demonstrates that post-Reconstruction Nashville, therefore, rather than New York or Chicago, was the formative site in the emergence of a New Negro, whose identity stood in vivid contrast to the compliant, rural and under-educated African American who preceded it"--, Provided by publisher
Table Of Contents
Introduction -- The New Negro genealogy -- Nashville : a southern black metropolis -- Soul searching : W.E.B. Du Bois in the "south of slavery" -- "Mightier than the sword" : the New Negro novels of Sutton E. Griggs -- "Tried by fire" : the African American boycott of Jim Crow streetcars in Nashville, 1905-1907 -- "Before I'd be a slave" : the Fisk University protests, 1924-1925 -- Epilogue
Classification
Content
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