Edited by Louis J. Parascandola
Paper - 9780814329870
Price: $29.95s
Subjects: Africana Studies: Literature and Poetry
Series: African American Life Series
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Published by Wayne State University Press
Louis J. Parascandola is associate professor of English at Long Island University and author of Winds Can Wake up the Dead: An Eric Walrond Reader (Wayne State University Press, 1998).
“Look for Me All Around You provides a generous, balanced, much-needed collection of Anglo-Caribbean writing from the Harlem Renaissance. The essays, poetry, drama, and fiction, introduced by Louis J. Parascandola’s superb discussion of Caribbean contributions to black politics and literature in the early twentieth century, demonstrate how distinctive—and how crucial—the Caribbean contribution to the movement really was. Anyone interested in the Harlem Renaissance will want to own this book.”
— George Hutchinson, Booth M. Tarkington Professor of Literary Studies, Indiana University, Bloomington
“Timely and well-edited, this interdisciplinary anthology of Caribbean writings during the Harlem Renaissance era will be indispensable to expanding debates on transnationalism in both American Studies and Postcolonial Studies.”
— Amritjit Singh, former MELUS President and co-editor of The Collected Writings of Wallace Thurman
“Against the background of the complex social tensions of the times, Parascandola’s text offers a comprehensive and timely reminder of the multi-faceted contribution of a marginalized community to the most significant cultural and ideological event in New York City’s history. Of special interest are accounts of the achievements of lesser-known voices and organs of social activism. Yet again, Parascandola extends the Harlem pantheon to acknowledge the pivotal role of Caribbean artists and intellectuals.”
— Carl Wade, University of the West Indies, Cave Hill, Barbados
“In Look for Me all around You, Louis Parascandola has identified, selected and gathered together a wide variety of writings by anglophone Afro-Caribbeans in the United States during the Harlem Renaissance years. Augmented by a fine introduction, this is a welcome and valuable anthology, adding to the growing body of literature on the truly remarkable and enduring contribution of those whom Du Bois in 1920 dubbed “this new Ethiopia of the Isles” in America.”
— Winston James, Columbia University, author of Holding Aloft the Banner of Ethiopia: Caribbean Radicalism in Early Twentieth-Century America.