Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Hurston, Zora Neale (Vol. 30) - Cheryl A. Wall
Hurston, Zora Neale (Vol. 30) - Cheryl A. Wall
CHERYL A. WALL
The critical perspectives inspired by the black consciousness and feminist movements allow us to see Hurston's writings in a new way. They correct distorted views of her folklore as charming and quaint, set aside misperceptions of her characters as minstrels caught, in Richard Wright's phrase, "between laughter and tears" [see excerpt above]. These new perspectives inform this re-evaluation of Hurston's work. She asserted that black people, while living in a racist society that denied their humanity, had created an alternative culture that validated their worth as human beings. Although that culture was in some respects sexist, black women, like black men, attained personal identity not by transcending the culture but by embracing it.
Hurston's respect for the cultural traditions of black people is the most important constant in her career. This respect threads through her entire oeuvre, linking the local-color short fiction of her youth, her...
[The entire page is 4853 words long]
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- Introduction
- Fannie Hurst
- Josephine Pinckney
- Margaret Wallace
- H. I. Brock
- Franz Boas
- Thomas Caldecot Chubb
- The Times Literary Supplement
- Nick Aaron Ford
- Sheila Hibben
- Richard Wright
- Otis Ferguson
- Sterling Brown
- Carl Carmer
- Percy Hutchison
- Carl Carmer
- Philip Slomovitz
- Arna Bontemps
- Beatrice Sherman
- Worth Tuttle Hedden
- Darwin T. Turner
- Addison Gayle, Jr.
- Theresa R. Love
- Robert E. Hemenway
- Sherley Anne Williams
- Roger Sale
- Alice Walker
- John Roberts
- Lillie P. Howard
- Cheryl A. Wall
- Copyright
