Share the story of what Open Access means to you
University of Michigan needs your feedback to better understand how readers are using openly available ebooks. You can help by taking a short, privacy-friendly survey.
Of Vagabonds and Fellow Travelers: African Diaspora Literary Culture and the Cultural Cold War
Cedric R. Tolliver
You don't have access to this book. Please try to log in with your institution.
Log in
Of Vagabonds and Fellow Travelers recovers the history of the writers, artists, and intellectuals of the African diaspora who, witnessing a transition to an American-dominated capitalist world-system during the Cold War, offered searing critiques of burgeoning U.S. hegemony. Cedric R. Tolliver traces this history through an analysis of signal events and texts where African diaspora literary culture intersects with the wider cultural Cold War, from the First Congress of Black Writers and Artists organized by Francophone intellectuals in September 1956 to the reverberations among African American writers and activists to the assassination of Patrice Lumumba. Among Tolliver's subjects are Caribbean writers Jacques Stephen Alexis, George Lamming, and Aimé Césaire, the black press writing of Alice Childress and Langston Hughes, and the ordeal of Paul Robeson, among other topics. The book's final chapter highlights the international and domestic consequences of the cultural Cold War and discusses their lingering effects on our contemporary critical predicament.
-
Cover
-
Title Page
-
Copyright Page
-
Contents
-
Acknowledgments
-
Introduction
-
Chapter 1. Reorienting the Cardinal Points
-
Chapter 2. Setting the Cold War Stage
-
Chapter 3. Fellow Travelers, Treacherous Ground
-
Chapter 4. Black Radical Vagabond
-
Chapter 5. Crisis and Rupture
-
Notes
-
Bibliography
-
Index
Citable Link
Published: 2019
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
- 978-0-472-05405-3 (paper)
- 978-0-472-12436-7 (ebook)
- 978-0-472-07405-1 (hardcover)
- 978-0-472-00393-8 (audio download)