The Crisis of the Negro Intellectual (New York Review Books Classics)

By Cruse, Harold

Publishers Summary:
First published in 1967 in the wake of race riots and integration fears, The Crisis of the Negro Intellectual is an indispensable history and urgent critique of the black left from the Harlem Renaissance through the black arts movement. Memorably portraying prominent figures such as Paul Robeson, Lorraine Hansberry, and James Baldwin, Harold Cruse tells of African American artists yoked to rigid doctrines that doom them to political and artistic failure. He then sweeps out from Harlem cultural institutions to broader issues - mass media and communism, black-Jewish relations, the revolutionary use of force - while searching out an authentic black culture based in political self-consciousness and economic independence.

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ISBN
978-1-59017-135-6
Publisher
New York Review Books Classics


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Library Journal

Reviewed on September 1, 2005

Released in 1967, Cruse's work rejects many of the standard notions of race rel...Log In or Sign Up to Read More

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