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9780393956009

Cane

by ;
  • ISBN13:

    9780393956009

  • ISBN10:

    0393956008

  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 1987-12-17
  • Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
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Summary

The growing interest in African-American literature that began in the 1960's led to the rediscovery of earlier African-American writers, one of whom is Jean Toomer, author of Cane. Originally published in 1923, Cane is considered a literary masterpiece of the Harlem Renaissance. It is an innovative literary work-part drama, part poetry, part fiction. "Backgrounds" contains generous excerpts from Jean Toomer's correspondence with fellow writers Sherwood Anderson, Waldo Frank, and Allen Tate, and with his publisher, Horace Liveright. Darwin T. Turner's "Introduction" (to the 1975 Liveright edition of Cane), reprinted here, presents the historical and literary backgrounds of the work, as well as additional biographical information on Toomer. "Criticism," both contemporary and recent, on Cane and Toomer is wide-ranging and includes essays by W. E. B. Du Bois, Gorham B. Munson, Robert Bone, Patricia Watkins, Lucinda H. MacKethan, Nellie Y. McKay, and Darwin T. Turner.

Table of Contents

Preface vii
A Note on the Text x
The Text of Cane 1(118)
Backgrounds 119(126)
Introduction [to the 1975 Edition of Cane]
121(17)
Darwin T. Turner
Foreword [to the 1923 Edition of Cane]
138(9)
Waldo Frank
[Autobiographical Selection]
140(7)
Jean Toomer
Correspondence
147(16)
Toomer on His Writing and Reputation
147(1)
To Katherine Flinn (September 20, 1927)
147(1)
To Harrison Smith (September 27, 1932)
147(1)
Jean Toomer and Sherwood Anderson
148(2)
To Sherwood Anderson (December 1922)
148(1)
To Sherwood Anderson (December 29, 1922)
149(1)
Cane, Sherwood Anderson, and the Negro
150(1)
To Waldo Frank (undated, late 1922 or early 1923)
150(1)
The Making of Cane
151(5)
To Waldo Frank (July 25, 1922)
151(1)
To Waldo Frank (December 12, 1922)
152(1)
Waldo Frank to Jean Toomer (undated, late 1922 or early 1923)
152(1)
To Waldo Frank (undated, late 1922 or early 1923)
153(1)
Waldo Frank to Jean Toomer (undated, late 1922 or early 1923)
153(1)
To Horace Liveright (February 27, 1923)
153(1)
Manuel Komroff to Jean Toomer (March 14, 1923)
154(1)
Waldo Frank to Jean Toomer (undated, summer 1923
154(1)
Waldo Frank to Jean Toomer (August 1923)
155(1)
Waldo Frank to Jean Toomer (undated, summer 1923
155(1)
To Waldo Frank [?] (undated, September 1923?)
156(1)
Advertising Cane
156(1)
To Horace Liveright (September 5, 1923)
156(1)
Projects after Cane
157(1)
To Horace Liveright (March 1923)
157(1)
Toomer's Art
157(6)
Waldo Frank to Jean Toomer (April 25, 1922)
157(3)
Waldo Frank to Jean Toomer (July 26, 1922)
160(1)
Sherwood Anderson to Jean Toomer (December 22, 1922)
160(1)
Sherwood Anderson to Jean Toomer (undated, ca. 1923)
160(1)
Waldo Frank to Jean Toomer (undated, ca. 1923)
160(1)
Allen Tate to Jean Toomer (November 7, 1923)
161(1)
Sherwood Anderson to Jean Toomer (January 3, 1924)
161(1)
John McClure to Sherwood Anderson (January 22, 1924)
161(2)
Criticism
163(82)
Contemporary Criticism
165(10)
[Self-Expression in Cane]
165(4)
Montgomery Gregory
Cane
169(1)
Robert Littell
[Sexual Liberation in Cane]
170(1)
W. E. B. Du Bois
[Toomer as Artist]
171(4)
Gorham B. Munson
More Recent Criticism
175(70)
Jean Toomer's Cane
175(5)
W. Edward Farrison
[Jean Toomer's Cane]
180(6)
Robert Bone
[Commentary on Jean Toomer and Cane]
186(6)
Arna Bontemps
Cane as Blues
192(4)
B. F. McKeever
The Search for Black Redemption: Jean Toomer's Cane
196(11)
John M. Reilly
Contrasts and Limitations in Cane]
207(8)
Darwin T. Turner
Is There a Unifying Theme in Cane?
215(2)
Patricia Watkins
[The Spectatorial Artist in Part One of Cane]
217(6)
Susan L. Blake
[The Poems of Cane]
223(4)
Bernard W. Bell
The Aesthetic Structure of Jean Toomer's Cane
227(2)
Michael Krasny
Jean Toomer's Cane: A Pastoral Problem
229(8)
Lucinda H. MacKethan
[Structure, Theme, and Imagery in Cane]
237(8)
Nellie Y. McKay
Selected Bibliography 245

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The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

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