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Preface | ||
Historical Overview | ||
Motherless Child | 2 | |
The Knee-High Man Tries to Get Sizable | 4 | |
How Buck Won His Freedom | 6 | |
from The Eatonville Anthology | 8 | |
People Who Could Fly | 11 | |
The Steel Drivin' Man | 15 | |
Swing Low, Sweet Chariot | 19 | |
Stagolee | 21 | |
Introduction from Black Talk | 32 | |
The Goophered Grapevine | 36 | |
See How They Run | 47 | |
Lift Every Voice and Sing | 65 | |
I Done Worked! | 67 | |
from The African Garden | 74 | |
The Creation | 80 | |
Music: Black, White and Blue | 86 | |
The Blues I'm Playing | 91 | |
It's the Law: a rap poem | 104 | |
Sonny's Blues | 107 | |
The Weary Blues | 133 | |
Dance Bodies #1 | 136 | |
Solo on the Drums | 139 | |
Canary | 145 | |
The Slave Mother | 149 | |
On Being Brought from Africa to America | 152 | |
Runagate Runagate | 154 | |
Letter to His Master | 158 | |
An Address to the Slaves of the United States of America | 163 | |
Nat Turner's Confession | 170 | |
Harriet Tubman Is in My Blood | 176 | |
Song of the Son | 185 | |
If We Must Die | 190 | |
I, Too | 192 | |
A Summer Tragedy | 194 | |
Willie | 203 | |
An Address Delivered at the Opening of the Cotton States' Exposition in Atlanta, Georgia, September, 1895 | 206 | |
Chapter 3: Of Mr. Booker T. Washington and Others | 211 | |
Miss Rosie | 222 | |
We Wear the Mask | 226 | |
from The Autobiography of Malcolm X | 228 | |
Hidden Name and Complex Fate | 241 | |
Where Is the Black Community? | 257 | |
Of Our Spiritual Strivings | 260 | |
All about My Job | 267 | |
Stranger in the Village | 271 | |
Epilogue from Invisible Man | 282 | |
Vive Noir! | 290 | |
Nikki-Roasa | 294 | |
The Immediate Program of the American Negro | 297 | |
Preface to a Twenty Volume Suicide Note | 303 | |
Assassination | 305 | |
Winter in America | 307 | |
To Mississippi Youth | 310 | |
I Have a Dream | 317 | |
The Tree of Love | 324 | |
the woman's mourning song | 328 | |
Getting the Facts of Life | 330 | |
Restoration: A Memorial - 9/18/91 | 339 | |
To Da-duh, In Memoriam | 342 | |
one thing i dont need | 352 | |
Magic | 355 | |
Plumes | 358 | |
Strong Men | 368 | |
My Search for Roots | 372 | |
Speech Delivered at Madison Square Garden, March 1924 | 377 | |
A Black Man Talks of Reaping | 383 | |
from The Big Sea | 385 | |
The Only Man on Liberty Street | 394 | |
Minstrel Man | 402 | |
The Man Who Was Almost a Man | 404 | |
The Union of Two | 416 | |
The Wife of His Youth | 418 | |
The Bean Eaters | 429 | |
Sweat | 432 | |
Letter from Charles R. Drew | 443 | |
1927 from Sula | 446 | |
Valentines | 451 | |
Thank You, M'am | 453 | |
For My People | 458 | |
A Day Lost Is a Day Gone Forever | 461 | |
Women | 467 | |
from In My Father's House | 469 | |
Mother to Son | 479 | |
Aunt | 481 | |
She Walked Alone | 483 | |
Acknowledgments | 489 | |
Author-Title Index | 493 |
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Add African-American Literature: An Anthology, 2nd Ed., African-American Literature is a collection of eighty-five selections that exemplify the range and depth of the writing of African Americans, including such early writers as Frederick Douglass and Phillis Wheatley and such modern writers as Haki Madhubuti, African-American Literature: An Anthology, 2nd Ed. to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add African-American Literature: An Anthology, 2nd Ed., African-American Literature is a collection of eighty-five selections that exemplify the range and depth of the writing of African Americans, including such early writers as Frederick Douglass and Phillis Wheatley and such modern writers as Haki Madhubuti, African-American Literature: An Anthology, 2nd Ed. to your collection on WonderClub |