Brown, Sterling Allen - John S. Wright (essay date spring 1989)
John S. Wright (essay date spring 1989)
SOURCE: Wright, John S. “The New Negro Poet and the Nachal Man: Sterling Brown's Folk Odyssey.” Black American Literature Forum 23, no. 1 (spring 1989): 95-105.
[In the following essay, Wright explores the impact of African American folklore on Brown's career and finds him uniquely qualified to provide an understanding of the work of Walter “Leadbelly” Boyd, the infamous African American Depression-era blues singer.]
In 1936, the year Sterling Brown and John Lomax joined forces supervising the collection of oral slave narratives for the Federal Writers' Project (see Mangione 257-63), Lomax and his son Alan published the first extended study of an American folksinger. That singer, one Walter Boyd, alias Hudie Ledbetter, alias “Leadbelly,” had been the self-proclaimed “King of the Twelve String Guitar Players of the World,” as well as the number one man in the number one gang on the...
[The entire page is 4615 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- Principal Works
-
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)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
