The Making of a Black Communist: The Selected Writings of Eugene Gordon: African American Intellectual History
Editat de Louis J. Parascandolaen Limba Engleză Paperback – 18 iul 2025
Gordon was born and raised in the South but made his way north at a young age. In Boston, he founded the Saturday Evening Quill Club, an African American literary group that included other notable writers such as Helene Johnson and Dorothy West. He later became editor of and contributor to two major publications coming out of the era: the Messenger and Opportunity: A Journal of Negro Life. As he grew more political, he joined the Communist Party in the 1930s and became editor of and contributor to the New Masses. Scholars looking to research him have struggled to find disparate writings to get a fuller sense of his literary stylings as well as his political commitments. This welcome new volume establishes Gordon as a significant, understudied figure.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781625348685
ISBN-10: 1625348681
Pagini: 313
Ilustrații: 3 illus.
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: University of Massachusetts Press
Colecția University of Massachusetts Press
Seria African American Intellectual History
ISBN-10: 1625348681
Pagini: 313
Ilustrații: 3 illus.
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: University of Massachusetts Press
Colecția University of Massachusetts Press
Seria African American Intellectual History
Notă biografică
Louis J. Parascandola is professor of English at Long Island University. He has edited or coedited several collections, including:Heroine of the Harlem Renaissance and Beyond: Gwendolyn Bennett’s Selected Writings; Amy Jacques Garvey: Selected Writings from The Negro World, 1923–1928; A Coney Island Reader: Through Dizzy Gates of Illusion; andEric Walrond: The Critical Heritage. His scholarship has appeared in Asian American Literature: Discourses and Pedagogies;Langston Hughes Review;Afro-Americans in New York Life and History;Comparative Literature Studies; and more.
Cuprins
CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Autobiographical Writings
"Southern Boyhood Nightmares"
Excerpt "Once I Was Afraid"
"New Orleans Negro Family"
"Killer At Large"
"Jim Peters' Black Boy"
"How Lt. Gordon Took His Seven Colored Heroes Into the Jaws of Death—And Back Again"
Fiction
"Rootbound"
"Game"
"Cold-Blooded"
"Buzzards"
"Sarcophagus"
"The Agenda"
"Good Thing It Wasn't a Cold Night"
"And I Ask, Why?"
Nonfiction
Excerpt "The Negro Press"
"The Opportunity Dinner: An Appreciation"
"The Negro's Inhibitions"
"A Word in Closing"
Excerpt "Christianity and the Negro"
"The Negro Grows Up"
Excerpt "Negro Society"
"The Legion Takes Boston"
"The Negro's New Leadership"
"Scottsboro—And The Nice People"
"Negro Novelists and the Negro Masses"
"Blacks Turn Red"
Excerpt "The Borden Case: The Struggle for Negro Rights in Boston"
"The Position of Negro Women"
"From 'Uncle Tom's Cabin' to 'Stevedore'"
"How Prostitution Has Been Fought and Almost Completely Eliminated in the USSR"
"Alabama Authorities Ignore White Gang's Rape of Negro Mother"
"The Cult of the White Woman"
Excerpt "Black Women's Long Tough Course": From 'Dat Gal' Carline to This Woman Angela"
Notes
Index
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Autobiographical Writings
"Southern Boyhood Nightmares"
Excerpt "Once I Was Afraid"
"New Orleans Negro Family"
"Killer At Large"
"Jim Peters' Black Boy"
"How Lt. Gordon Took His Seven Colored Heroes Into the Jaws of Death—And Back Again"
Fiction
"Rootbound"
"Game"
"Cold-Blooded"
"Buzzards"
"Sarcophagus"
"The Agenda"
"Good Thing It Wasn't a Cold Night"
"And I Ask, Why?"
Nonfiction
Excerpt "The Negro Press"
"The Opportunity Dinner: An Appreciation"
"The Negro's Inhibitions"
"A Word in Closing"
Excerpt "Christianity and the Negro"
"The Negro Grows Up"
Excerpt "Negro Society"
"The Legion Takes Boston"
"The Negro's New Leadership"
"Scottsboro—And The Nice People"
"Negro Novelists and the Negro Masses"
"Blacks Turn Red"
Excerpt "The Borden Case: The Struggle for Negro Rights in Boston"
"The Position of Negro Women"
"From 'Uncle Tom's Cabin' to 'Stevedore'"
"How Prostitution Has Been Fought and Almost Completely Eliminated in the USSR"
"Alabama Authorities Ignore White Gang's Rape of Negro Mother"
"The Cult of the White Woman"
Excerpt "Black Women's Long Tough Course": From 'Dat Gal' Carline to This Woman Angela"
Notes
Index
Recenzii
“Parascandola provides not only a thorough introduction of Eugene Gordon and his writings, through which readers can glean his importance, but also accessible explanatory notes for each of the writings collected in the volume, which is instructive for the reader who may not be familiar with the historical context(s) in which Gordon was writing. The collection also includes writings that focus on themes that are relevant to our historical moment, including the intersections of race, class, and gender; racial and gender violence; and race and labor.”—Charisse Burden-Stelly, author of Black Scare/Red Scare: Theorizing Capitalist Racism in the United States
“This new volume helps recover the work of Eugene Gordon, a leading figure of the Black Left in the 1930s who has received little scholarly attention. Parascandola’s book does much to correct that.”—James Smethurst, author of Brick City Vanguard: Amiri Baraka, Black Music, Black Modernity
“This new volume helps recover the work of Eugene Gordon, a leading figure of the Black Left in the 1930s who has received little scholarly attention. Parascandola’s book does much to correct that.”—James Smethurst, author of Brick City Vanguard: Amiri Baraka, Black Music, Black Modernity