Search Results:
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	 Book BookGenerations of CaptivityBerlin has long been concerned with studying what he termed the “striking diversity” in African-American life under slavery—a diversity that, he argues, is especially evident when one is attentive to differences over space and time. 
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	 Book BookWorld HotelHer awards include a 1999 Pushcart Prize, a 1998 Poets & Writers Exchange Program’s Discovery award, a “Discovery”/The Nation award, fellowships from the Watson Foundation, the Sewanee Writers Conference, the Bread Loaf Writers Conference. 
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	 Book BookA Problem From HellThe emotional force of Power’s argument is carried by moving, sometimes almost unbearable stories of the victims and survivors of such brutality. 
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	 Author AuthorAdrienne KennedyAdrienne Kennedy has been a force in American theatre since the early 1960s, influencing generations of playwrights with her hauntingly fragmentary lyrical dramas. 
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	 Book BookThe Emperor of Ocean ParkStephen L. Carter has helped shape the national debate on issues ranging from the role of religion in American politics and culture to the impact of integrity and civility in our daily lives. 
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	 Author AuthorJay WrightWright’s latest work, “Transfigurations: Collected Poems” has been called ‘nothing less than the great work of art.’ 
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	 Book BookJohn Henry DaysSmart, learned and soaringly ambitious, his second novel consolidates his position as one of the leading writers of serious fiction of his generation. 
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	 Book BookVernon Can ReadIn the 1960s, Jordan was an advocate for the desegregation of Georgia’s colleges and helped escort a female black student through an angry mob when the University of Georgia was desegregated. 
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	 Book BookQuincy JonesQuincy Jones cannot be pigeonholed. In his 50-year music career, Jones has worn the hats of composer, record producer, artist, arranger, conductor, instrumentalist and record company executive. 
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	 Book BookRope Burns: Stories from the CornerToole explores the world of boxing with an insider’s directness and understanding, all the while remaining true to the flawed, noble humanity of his characters. 
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	 Book BookW.E.B. Du BoisThe Los Angeles Times Book Review calls it ‘a work of keen scholarship that will appeal to the general reader responsive to graceful, lucid prose by an author with an eye for ironic situations and complex emotions.’ 
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	 Book BookAlways Outnumbered, Always OutgunnedAlthough Mosley’s fiction falls into a category that many consider subliterary—detective fiction—his depth of character, researched historical details, and realistic dialogue transcend the cliches of the genre. 
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	 Author AuthorLucille CliftonClifton’s writing is steeped in the rich oral tradition of the griot—the African storyteller. Through verse Clifton has scrutinized the American dream through the eyes of its most powerless and neglected citizens: women, minorities and children. 
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	 Book BookOut of PlaceEdward W. Said was one of the foremost cultural critics of the postwar world. He wrote extensively on history, politics, literature, music and philosophy. 
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	 Book BookA Gesture LifeBy exploring his own experiences as a second-generation Korean-born American, Lee’s novels portray the tensions between assimilation into a society and alienation from oneself and one’s heritage. 
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	 Author AuthorErnest J. GainesGaines was never exposed to black writers, and so his literary models were such white American writers as Ernest Hemingway and William Faulkner, and European writers such as Russian novelist Leo Tolstoy. He decided early, however, to focus his own writing on what he knew—which meant portraying African American culture and language. 
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	 Book BookWalking with the WindLewis marched with civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama, in an effort to secure voting rights for African Americans. During the march, a confrontation with police occurred, and Lewis was one of many marchers beaten in what became known as Bloody Sunday. 
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	 Author AuthorJohn Hope FranklinFor Franklin, the task of correcting American history in the light of black experience had always been a crucial part of the fight for racial equality. 
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	 Book BookCloudsplitterRaised in rural New Hampshire, Banks initially planned to follow his father into the plumbing business; where he grew up, he told an interviewer, ‘the idea of being a writer was like the idea of being a butterfly.’