Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Haley, Alex (Vol. 12) - David Herbert Donald
Haley, Alex (Vol. 12) - David Herbert Donald
DAVID HERBERT DONALD
As the reconstruction of a genealogy, Haley's [Roots] is a tour de force…. [It] reminds us how even in appallingly adverse circumstances blacks often maintained, through oral traditions, a full account of their lineage and a proper sense of their individual identities. Skillfully, Haley checked his oral history against surviving written documents, and the family tree that he has outlined seems not just plausible but authentic. It is easy to accept Haley's statement: "To the best of my knowledge and of my effort, every lineage statement within Roots is from either my African or American families' carefully preserved oral history, much of which I have been able conventionally to corroborate with documents." (p. 70)
Readers should not expect to find in these pages an accurate history of Haley's family, any more than they would look for a factually complete account of the Civil War in Stephen Vincent Benet's John...
[The entire page is 926 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- Robert Penn Warren
- Nat Hentoff
- COLIN MacINNES
- Carol Ohmann
- Warner Berthoff
- Michael G. Cooke
- David Herbert Donald
- Arnold Rampersad
- Russell Warren Howe
- Dale Norton
- Adam David Miller
- Ali A. Mazrui
- Carole Meritt
- Nancy L. Arnez
- Howard F. Stein
- Michael G. Cooke
- Dillibe Onyeama
- Arthur Unger
- James Wolcott
- Janet Maslin
- Michael J. Arlen
- Copyright
