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Trumpeting a Fiery Sound: History and Folklore in Margaret Walker's Jubilee

Contributor(s): Carmichael, Jacqueline Miller (Author)

ISBN: 9780820325750

Publisher: University of Georgia Press

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Pub Date: November 3, 2003

Dewey: 813.52

LCCN: 2007540319

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Index

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.42" H x 9.00" L x 6.00" W ( 0.61 lbs) 184 pages

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description:

When twenty-seven-year-old Margaret Walker's first collection of poems, For My People, won the Yale Poets Award in 1942, she was just beginning her long and distinguished career as a poet, novelist, biographer, and teacher. When her novel Jubilee was published to great acclaim in 1966, the New York Review of Books said, "[It] chronicles the triumph of a free spirit over many kinds of bondages."

Jubilee is noteworthy for being one of the first novels to present African American history from both a black and female perspective. It is a historical and fictional account of Walker's great-grandmother's life, from slavery through Reconstruction, as told to Walker by her maternal grandmother. In Trumpeting a Fiery Sound, Jacqueline Miller Carmichael examines the novel's genesis and composition, the process of revision and publication, the work's structure and narrative strategies, its use of history and folklore, and its critical reception in the three decades since its first publication.

Brief description: JACQUELINE MILLER CARMICHAEL (1935-2018) taught English at Georgia State University. She lived in Atlanta.

Review Quotes:

As Jacqueline Miller Carmichael notes in the introduction to Trumpeting a Fiery Sound, Margaret Walker's neo-slave narrative Jubilee (1966) has not garnered the critical attention one might expect, particularly given the current scholarly interest in black women writers. A book-length study of Walker and her work seems long overdue. . . . Carmichael's approach to Jubilee emphasizes the historical nature of the novel; her respectful approach to Walker and the text is celebratory. Having confirmed the historical and folkloric foundations of the novel, Carmichael leaves the reader poised to explore more complex questions about the ways in which folklore and history function in the novel.

--Southern Quarterly

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