Fettered Genius: The African American Bardic Poet from Slavery to Civil Rights

Fettered Genius: The African American Bardic Poet from Slavery to Civil Rights

by Keith D. Leonard
ISBN-10:
0813925061
ISBN-13:
9780813925066
Pub. Date:
12/29/2005
Publisher:
University of Virginia Press
ISBN-10:
0813925061
ISBN-13:
9780813925066
Pub. Date:
12/29/2005
Publisher:
University of Virginia Press
Fettered Genius: The African American Bardic Poet from Slavery to Civil Rights

Fettered Genius: The African American Bardic Poet from Slavery to Civil Rights

by Keith D. Leonard

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Overview

In Fettered Genius, Keith D. Leonard identifies how African American poets’ use and revision of traditional poetics constituted an antiracist political agency. Comparing this practice to the use of poetic mastery by the ancient Celtic bards to resist British imperialism, Leonard shows how traditional poetics enable African American poets to insert racial experience, racial protest, and African American culture into public discourse by making them features of validated artistic expression. As with the Celtic bards, these poets’ artistry testified to their marginalized people’s capacity for imagination and reason within and against the terms of the dominant culture.

In an ambitious survey that moves from slavery to the cultural nationalism of the 1960s, Leonard examines numerous poets, placing each in the context of his or her time to demonstrate the antiracist meaning of their accomplishments. The book offers new insight on the conservatism of Phillis Wheatley, Paul Laurence Dunbar, and the genteel members of the Harlem Renaissance, how their rage for assimilation functioned to refute racist notions of difference and, paradoxically, to affirm a distinctive racial experience as valid material for poetry. Leonard also demonstrates how the more progressive and ethnically distinctive poetics of Langston Hughes, Sterling Brown, Gwendolyn Brooks, Robert Hayden, and Melvin B. Tolson share some of the same ambivalence about cultural achievement as those of the earlier poets. They also have in common the self-conscious pursuit of an affirmation of the African American self through the substitution of African American vernacular language and cultural forms for traditional poetic themes and forms. The evolution of these poetics parallels the emergence of notions of ethnic identity over racial identity and, indeed, in some ways even motivated this shift.

Leonard recognizes poetic mastery as the African American bardic poet’s most powerful claim of ethnic tradition and of social belonging and clarifies the full hybrid complexity of African American identity that makes possible this political self-assertion. The development that is traced in Fettered Genius illustrates nothing less than the defining artistic coherence and political significance of the African American poetic tradition.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780813925066
Publisher: University of Virginia Press
Publication date: 12/29/2005
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 256
Sales rank: 1,044,736
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.25(h) x 1.25(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Keith D. Leonard is Assistant Professor of Literature at American University. His work has appeared in African American Review and The Oxford Companion to African American Literature.

What People are Saying About This

""Not since Eugene Redmond's Drumvoices (1976) have we had a scholarly examination of African American poetry and poetics that so ably takes on such a broad swath of literary history.... It is inconceivable to me that any libraries or any readers with an interest in American verse would not want to include this volume in their collection." -- Aldon Lynn NielsenPennsylvania State University, author of Black Chant: Languages of African American Postmodernism

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