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Book Categories |
Acknowledgments | 9 | |
Introduction | 11 | |
A Note on the Text | 43 | |
Some Notes on Caribbean English | 44 | |
Journalism | ||
Art and Propaganda | 53 | |
Marcus Garvey - A Defense | 55 | |
The Dice of Destiny | 57 | |
Visit to Arthur Schomburg's Library Brings out Wealth of Historical Information | 59 | |
Developed and Undeveloped Negro Literature: Writers Desert Great Field of Folk-Life for Propagandism | 62 | |
Bert Williams Foundation Organized to Perpetuate Ideals of Celebrated Actor | 64 | |
El Africano | 66 | |
Fiction | ||
A Senator's Memoirs | 71 | |
A Black Virgin | 74 | |
On Being Black | 76 | |
I Am an American | 81 | |
On Being a Domestic | 84 | |
The Stone Rebounds | 87 | |
Vignettes of the Dusk | 90 | |
The Voodoo's Revenge | 94 | |
Journalism | ||
The New Negro Faces America | 109 | |
The Negro Comes North | 113 | |
The Black City | 116 | |
Review of There Is Confusion | 119 | |
Imperator Africanus: Marcus Garvey: Menace or Promise? | 121 | |
The Negro Literati | 128 | |
Negro Folk-Song | 132 | |
The Epic of a Mood | 135 | |
From Cotton, Cane, and Rice Fields | 138 | |
The Color of the Caribbean | 142 | |
Fiction | ||
Miss Kenny's Marriage | 149 | |
The Godless City | 161 | |
The Adventures of Kit Skyhead and Mistah Beauty: An All-Negro Evening in the Coloured Cabarets of New York | 173 | |
City Love | 179 | |
Drought | 189 | |
The Yellow One | 199 | |
The Wharf Rats | 210 | |
The Palm Porch | 222 | |
The Black Pin | 231 | |
The Vampire Bat | 242 | |
Tropic Death | 253 | |
Journalism | ||
White Man, What Now? | 279 | |
The Negro in London | 282 | |
The Negro before the World | 286 | |
On England | 289 | |
Review of Twelve Million Black Voices | 292 | |
Fiction | ||
Inciting to Riot | 297 | |
Consulate | 305 | |
Morning in Colon | 310 | |
By the River Avon | 315 | |
Poor Great | 321 | |
Annotations | 327 | |
Bibliography | 341 | |
Emendations | 349 |
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Add Winds Can Wake up the Dead: An Eric Walrond Reader, Eric Walrond (1898-1966), a significant figure in the Harlem Renaissance and New Negro Movement, is a seminal writer of Black diasporic life, but much of his work is not readily available. This new anthology brings together a broad sampling of Walrond's w, Winds Can Wake up the Dead: An Eric Walrond Reader to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add Winds Can Wake up the Dead: An Eric Walrond Reader, Eric Walrond (1898-1966), a significant figure in the Harlem Renaissance and New Negro Movement, is a seminal writer of Black diasporic life, but much of his work is not readily available. This new anthology brings together a broad sampling of Walrond's w, Winds Can Wake up the Dead: An Eric Walrond Reader to your collection on WonderClub |