Book Cover

Cane

Contributor(s): Toomer, Jean (Author), Byrd, Rudolph P (Afterword by), Gates, Henry Louis (Afterword by)

ISBN: 9780871402103

Publisher: Liveright Publishing Corporation

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Pub Date: June 13, 2011

Dewey: FIC

LCCN: 2011014913

Lexile Code: 0660

Features: Price on Product - Canadian, Price on Product, Table of Contents

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.70" H x 8.20" L x 5.50" W ( 0.45 lbs) 256 pages

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: A masterpiece of the Harlem Renaissance and a canonical work in both the American and the African-American literary traditions. "A breakthrough in prose and poetical writing . . . This book should be on all readers' and writers' desks and in their minds."--Maya Angelou.

Brief description: Rudolph P. Byrd (Ph.D. Yale University) is the Goodrich C. White Professor of American Studies in the Graduate Institute of the Liberal Arts and the Department of African American Studies and the founding director of the James Weldon Johnson Institute for Advanced Interdisciplinary Studies at Emory University. He is the author and editor of ten books, including Jean Toomer's Years with Gurdjieff; Essentials by Jean Toomer with Charles Johnson; Charles Johnson's Novels: Writing the American Palimpsest; The Essential Writings of James Weldon Johnson; and with Alice Walker The World Has Changed: Conversations with Alice Walker. Among Professor Byrd's awards and fellowships are an Andrew W. Mellon Fellowship at Harvard University; Visiting Scholar at the Bellagio Study and Conference Center; and the Thomas Jefferson Award from Emory University. He is a founding officer of the Alice Walker Literary Society.

Review Quotes: By far the most impressive product of the Negro Renaissance, Cane ranks with Richard Wright's Native Son and Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man as a measure of the Negro novelist's highest achievement. Jean Toomer belongs to that first rank of writers who use words almost as a plastic medium, shaping new meanings from an original and highly personal style. --Robert A. Bone, The Negro Novel in America (1965)"

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