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Chapter 9 - Meanwhile, Back on the Home Front

from III - Beyond the Canon

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 November 2022

Shelly Eversley
Affiliation:
Baruch College, The City University of New York
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Summary

This chapter argues that Black community obtained as much in the 1960s as it did during the 1930s, and as Vincent O. Carter’s overlooked stream-of-consciousness novel, Such Sweet Thunder itself implies is inevitably the case, it was forged as much in the context of what we might call collective domesticity as in the properly political public sphere. Indeed, Carter’s novel offers up three primary mechanisms for the establishment and maintenance of African American community that, precisely because they are by no means unfamiliar, certainly have to have been deployed throughout the entire period during which Carter was seeking a publisher: social dance and musical enjoyment; communal food preparation and consumption; and storytelling. If we trace some of the ways these mechanisms were implemented in that 1960s historical context, as this chapter explains, we can arrive at a fuller understanding of what constituted African American life during the period than if we focus on political activity alone, with the likely result that we will also arrive at an expanded conception of African American literary culture during this pivotal decade.

Type
Chapter
Information
African American Literature in Transition, 1960–1970
Black Art, Politics, and Aesthetics
, pp. 229 - 252
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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