sced 407 a/b african american literature and culture overview

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SCED 407 A/B African American Literature and Culture Overview

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Page 1: SCED 407 A/B African American Literature and Culture Overview

SCED 407 A/B

African American Literature and CultureOverview

Page 2: SCED 407 A/B African American Literature and Culture Overview

Historical Information

• The majority of Americans of African heritage can trace their origins to western Africa (Empires: Ghana, Mali, and Songhai).

• European nations began the slave trade in the 1500s.

• Majority of enslaved Africans were sent to what is now the United States and Latin America.

Page 3: SCED 407 A/B African American Literature and Culture Overview

• An estimated 10 million enslaved Africans were sent to the United States during the 300 year slave trade.

• According to the 1790 census (the first one) about 59,000 free African Americans were living in the United States.

Page 4: SCED 407 A/B African American Literature and Culture Overview

Early Literary Milestones

• In the U.S., Briton Hammon was the first black prose writer of record with "A Narrative ... of Briton Hammon, A Negro Man" in 1760.

• The first poet was Lucy Terry with "Bars Flight" in 1746.

• Phillis Wheatley published her first poem in 1770.

Page 5: SCED 407 A/B African American Literature and Culture Overview

Literary Milestones

• An important body of literature in black America is very recent.

• In centuries past, however, notable contributions were made to the literature of the African American's respective culture. – Jacques Captain in Holland– Juan Latino in Spain– Alexander Pushkin in Russia– Alexandre Dumas in France.

Page 6: SCED 407 A/B African American Literature and Culture Overview

19th Century Milestones

– The birth of a real African-American literary tradition dates from l853 when William Wells Brown wrote "Clotel", the story of the hardships of a mulatto family.

• Charles Waddell Chestnut was the first to give series consideration to the artistic requirements of the short story and novel. His works were published as early as 1887.

Page 7: SCED 407 A/B African American Literature and Culture Overview

20th Century Milestones

• W. E. B. DuBois and James Weldon Johnson commanded a national audience when DuBois wrote "Souls of Black Folks", 1903, and Johnson produced his "Autobiography of an Ex-Coloured Man", 1912.

• Countee Cullen • Harlem Renaissance

– Langston Hughes – Arna Bontemps – Zora Neale Hurston

Page 8: SCED 407 A/B African American Literature and Culture Overview

Contemporary Writers

• Richard Wright• Ralph Ellison who received the National

Book Award in 1952 for Invisible Man. • James Baldwink, Go Tell It On The

Mountain. • Eldridge Cleaver, Soul on Ice• Maya Angelou's autobiographical I Know

Why the Caged Bird Sings the first nonfiction work by a black woman on the best-seller list.

• Alex Haley's, Roots, for which he won the Pulitzer Prize in 1977.

Page 9: SCED 407 A/B African American Literature and Culture Overview

Language of African American Literature

• Oral Tradition

• Call/response Patterns in Literature

• Extensive Use of the Following Poetic Elements:

»Alliteration

»Repetition

»Rhyme Patterns

Page 10: SCED 407 A/B African American Literature and Culture Overview

Common Themes• The “Dream Deferred”• Struggle Against

Oppression• “The black islet in the midst

of the white island…(p.446).

• Harlem Renaissance

Page 11: SCED 407 A/B African American Literature and Culture Overview

Common Themes (cont’d)

• African American literature has been inextricably linked with the complex racial realities which have surrounded the black writer.

• With few exceptions, the major literary efforts of the African American have stemmed - directly or indirectly - from the existential facts of life for the black race in "white America".

Page 12: SCED 407 A/B African American Literature and Culture Overview

Electronic and Internet Resources

• Please note that all websites were retrieved during the week of October 11th, 2004

• http://www.pbs.org/teachersource/arts_lit/high_amlit.shtm

• A variety of resources for teaching African American Literature. It includes a variety of slave narratives.

• http://www.alexanderstreet2.com/BLDRLive/• Black Drama• A resource for black drama from 1850-present• http://www.pbs.org/teachersource/arts_lit/

high_music.shtm

Page 13: SCED 407 A/B African American Literature and Culture Overview

• A PBS site that explores African traditions and gives particular emphasis to oral tradition.

• http://falcon.jmu.edu/~ramseyil/yalit.htm• Yond Adult Literature Website for Young Adult

Literature• There are special links to African American

Literature resources for teachers. (There is also one for Asian American Literature).

• http://falcon.jmu.edu/~ramseyil/angelou.htm• May Angelou Teacher Resource• I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings is one of the

most often taught novels in 6-12th grade. This website offers tremendous resources for students.

Page 14: SCED 407 A/B African American Literature and Culture Overview

• http://www.ups.edu/faculty/dmacey/encyclopedia.html

• Encyclopedia of African American Literature

• Great overall resource • http://lhs.lexingtonma.org/Library/

Classlinks/History/blackhistory.html• As we already know as teachers,

literature is a reflection of time and place. This website provides historical information about African Americans.

• http://cityhonors.buffalo.k12.ny.us/city/rsrcs/eng/auth/afro.html

• Meta Search Engine for African American Authors.