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Gwendolyn Brooks (The Sixties in America)
Early Life
The parents of Gwendolyn Elizabeth Brooks, a janitor and schoolteacher, encouraged the young girl’s literary gifts and provided a loving home and an excellent education for her and her younger brother. As a high school student, Brooks received advice from African American poets James Weldon Johnson and Langston Hughes. After attending Wilson Junior College, she studied poetic technique...
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- Gwendolyn Brooks (Magill’s Survey of American Literature, Revised Edition)
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- Gwendolyn Brooks (The Sixties in America)
See Also
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Annie Allen (Masterplots Classics) -
Annie Allen (Women’s Literature) -
Ballad of Rudolph Reed, The (Poetry) -
Chicago Defender Sends a Man to Little Rock, The (Poetry) -
First Fight. Then Fiddle (Poetry) -
Maud Martha (African American Literature) -
Maud Martha (American Fiction) -
Maud Martha (Women’s Literature) -
Maud Martha (Character Profiles) -
Mother, The (Poetry) -
Poetry of Gwendolyn Brooks (Identities and Issues) -
Poetry of Brooks, The (African American Literature) -
Rise of Maud Martha, The (Short Stories) -
Selected Poems (Women’s Literature) -
Street in Bronzeville, A (Identities and Issues) -
African American Poetry (Topical Overview--Poetry) -
English and American Poetry in the Twentieth Century (Topical Overview--Poetry) -
Explicating Poetry (Topical Overview--Poetry)
