Brown, Sterling Allen - Gary Smith (essay date June 1989)
Gary Smith (essay date June 1989)
SOURCE: Smith, Gary. “The Literary Ballads of Sterling A. Brown.” CLA Journal 32, no. 4 (June 1989): pp. 393-409.
[In the following essay, Smith discusses the “complexity of Brown's artistic vision” and views the poet's major achievement as the restoration and recreation of African American folk literature.]
Sterling Brown, more reflective, a closer student of folk-life, and above all a bolder and more detached observer, has gone deeper still, and has found certain basic, more sober and more persistent qualities of Negro thought and feeling; and so has reached a sort of common denominator between the old and the new Negro. Underneath the particularities of one generation are hidden universalities which only deeply penetrating genius can fathom and bring to the surface. Too many of the articulate intellects of the Negro group—including sadly enough the younger poets—themselves...
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- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- E. Clay (essay date June 1934)
- Sterling Stuckey (essay date 1974)
- Clyde Taylor (essay date March-April 1981)
- Vera M. Kutzinski (essay date spring 1982)
- John F. Callahan (essay date 20 December 1982)
- John S. Wright (essay date spring 1989)
- Gary Smith (essay date June 1989)
- Stephen E. Henderson (essay date 1991)
- Angela E. Chamblee (essay date March 1993)
- Mark A. Sanders (essay date December 1994)
- Michael Tomasek Manson (essay date spring 1996)
- John Edgar Tidwell (essay date autumn 1997)
- Lorenzo Thomas (essay date autumn 1997)
- Charles H. Rowell (essay date 1997)
- Edward Hirsch (essay date March-April 1999)
- Elizabeth Davey (essay date summer 1999)
- Joanne V. Gabbin (essay date 1999)
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