Editing the Harlem Renaissance
Ross K Tangedal editor Joshua M Murray editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Liverpool University Press
Published:28th Oct '24
£39.95
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In his introduction to the foundational 1925 text The New Negro, Alain Locke described the “Old Negro” as “a creature of moral debate and historical controversy,” necessitating a metamorphosis into a literary art that embraced modernism and left sentimentalism behind. This was the underlying theoretical background that contributed to the flowering of African American culture and art that would come to be called the Harlem Renaissance. While the popular period has received much scholarly attention, the significance of editors and editing in the Harlem Renaissance remains woefully understudied. Editing the Harlem Renaissance foregrounds an in-depth, exhaustive approach to relevant editing and editorial issues, exploring not only those figures of the Harlem Renaissance who edited in professional capacities, but also those authors who employed editorial practices during the writing process and those texts that have been discovered and/or edited by others in the decades following the Harlem Renaissance. Editing the Harlem Renaissance considers developmental editing, textual self-fashioning, textual editing, documentary editing, and bibliography. Chapters utilize methodologies of authorial intention, copy-text, manuscript transcription, critical edition building, and anthology creation. Together, these chapters provide readers with a new way of viewing the artistic production of one of the United States’ most important literary movements.
Reviews'Editing the Harlem Renaissance is an outstanding and impressive text. This invaluable collection demonstrates the relevance of the Harlem Renaissance to African American literature and will result in generating productive and constructive discussion among scholars about editors and Harlem Renaissance texts.'
Sharon L. Jones, author of Rereading the Harlem Renaissance
'Editing the Harlem Renaissance is an important collection that clearly makes the argument that editing, broadly conceived, was and is a major force in shaping and continuing to shape the Harlem Renaissance and our perspectives on it. Its essays engage in generative work that offer new pathways into the Harlem Renaissance and its afterlives.'
Eurie Dahn, American Periodicals: A Journal of History & Criticism
'What is transformative about Murray and Tangedal’s approach is their assiduous scrutiny of the complex dynamics that undergird textual and archival recuperation, practices always entangled with broader social and political forces.'
Rachel Farebrother, American Literary History
ISBN: 9781835538739
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
312 pages