The Portable Charles W. Chesnutt by Charles W. Chesnutt - ISBN: 9780143105343
Paperback
Slavery’s aftermath, race, and legacy: Chesnutt’s genius revealed.

$36.99

  • Paperback

    544 pages

  • Release Date

    27 May 2008

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Summary

A collection from one of our most influential African American writers

An icon of nineteenth-century American fiction, Charles W. Chesnutt, an incisive storyteller of the aftermath of slavery in the South, is widely credited with almost single-handedly inaugurating the African American short story tradition and was the first African American novelist to achieve national critical acclaim. This major addition to Penguin Classics features an ideal sampling of his work—twelve short storie…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9780143105343
ISBN-10:0143105345
Author:Charles W. Chesnutt, William L. Andrews, Henry Louis Gates
Publisher:Penguin Putnam Inc
Imprint:Penguin Classics
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:544
Release Date:27 May 2008
Weight:399g
Dimensions:195mm x 130mm x 30mm
Series:Penguin Classics
About The Author

Charles W. Chesnutt

William L. Andrews is E. Maynard Adams Distinguished Professor of English Emeritus at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He is the author of The Literary Career of Charles W. Chesnutt (1980), To Tell a Free Story- The First Century of Afro-American Autobiography, 1760-1865 (1986), and Slavery and Class in the American South- A Generation of Slave Narrative Testimony, 1840-1865 (2019). A co-editor of the Norton Anthology of African American Literature and The Oxford Companion to African American Literature, he has edited Chesnutt’s Conjure Tales and Stories of the Color Line for Penguin Classics. In 2018 he received the Jay B. Hubbell Medal from the Modern Language Association for lifetime achievement in the study of American Literature.

Henry Louis Gates, Jr. was Professor of English, Comparative Literature, and Africana Studies at Cornell University, and also tenured at Yale, Duke, and Harvard, where he was appointed W.E.B. DuBois professor of humanities in 1991. Professor Gates is the author of Figures in Black- Words, Signs, and the Racial Self, Wonders of the African World, The Signifying Monkey- A Theory of African-American Literary Criticism, Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Black Man, Loose Cannons- Notes on the Culture Wars, and Colored People- A Memoir. With Cornel West, he co-wrote The African American Century- How Black Americans Have Shaped Our Country and The Future of the Race. He is also the editor of the critically-acclaimed edition of Our Nig, an annotated reprint of Harriet E. Wilson’s 1859 novel, The Slave’s Narrative (with the late Charles T. Davis), Africana- The Encyclopedia of the African and African-American Experience, Six Women’s Slave Narratives, and In the House of Oshugbo- Critical Essays on Wole Soyinka. He is a recipient of the MacArthur Prize.

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