Brotherman: The Odyssey of Black Men in AmericaHerb Boyd, Robert L. Allen "[AN] OUTSTANDING COLLECTION... The powerful opening excerpt by Frederick Douglass evokes his boyhood as a slave, and the collection closes with an eloquent discussion of the race problem today by Cornel West. A distinguished addition to black studies". --Publishers Weekly (starred review) The purpose of this extraordinary anthology is made abundantly clear by the editors' stated intention: "to create a living mosaic of essays and stories in which Black men can view themselves, and be viewed without distortion". In this, they have succeeded brilliantly. Brotherman contains more than one hundred and fifty selections, some never before published--from slave narratives, memoirs, social histories, novels, poems, short stories, biographies, autobiographies, position papers, and essays. Brotherman books us passage to the world that Black men experience as adolescents, lovers, husbands, fathers, workers, warriors, and elders. On this journey they encounter pain, confusion, anger, and love while confronting the life-threatening issues of race, sex, and politics--often as strangers in a strange land. The first collection of its kind, Brotherman gathers together a multitude of voices that add a new, unforgettable chapter to American cultural identity. |
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Page 248
... words before . But when he pulled her to him again , she twisted his finger until it hurt . And that was something he had not experienced before . His father suffered a mild stroke a week before the wedding . “ Do not take this sickness ...
... words before . But when he pulled her to him again , she twisted his finger until it hurt . And that was something he had not experienced before . His father suffered a mild stroke a week before the wedding . “ Do not take this sickness ...
Page 543
... words . Then I would take the pa- per away with me , armed now with the meaning of those words , and reread and reread the article so that the meaning of those words would get locked into my memory . Every evening we did that . He paid ...
... words . Then I would take the pa- per away with me , armed now with the meaning of those words , and reread and reread the article so that the meaning of those words would get locked into my memory . Every evening we did that . He paid ...
Page 544
... words , and when I ran into words I couldn't pronounce and didn't understand , I would work on them until some sense began to come . I would keep going over and over the sentence they were in , and after a while I would begin to get an ...
... words , and when I ran into words I couldn't pronounce and didn't understand , I would work on them until some sense began to come . I would keep going over and over the sentence they were in , and after a while I would begin to get an ...
Contents
Strong Men Opening Stanzas | 3 |
NOUK BASSOMB | 9 |
BOOKER T WASHINGTON | 20 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
African American asked began believe better blood blue body brother called carry cause close colored coming Daddy dark death didn't don't door EARL eyes face fact father feel felt fight fire friends gave girl give hand happened hard head hear heard hold keep kind knew later learned leave light lived looked matter mean mind morning mother move Negro never night once opened passed problem question race raised remember seemed side sister smile sometimes soon standing started stay stop street sure talk tell things thought told took town tried Troy trying turned voice waiting walked watched woman women wonder young