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Albert Murray and the aesthetic imagination of a nation (2nd edition.)

Baker, Barbara A.Buckley, Gail(Contributions by)Callahan, John F(Contributions by)Devlin, Paul(Contributions by)DuBlanc, Robin(Contributions by)Fiedorek, Elizabeth Mayer(Contributions by)Friedman, Carol(Contributions by)Gebhard, Caroline(Contributions by)Gramberg, Anne-Katrin(Contributions by)Hitchcock, Bert(Contributions by)Holley, Eugene(Contributions by)Lamar, Jay(Contributions by)Maguire, Roberta S.(Contributions by)Murray, Albert(Contributions by)Noble, Don(Contributions by)Offit, Sidney(Contributions by)Pinsker, Sanford(Contributions by)Pogue, Maurice(Contributions by)Rabb, Louis A(Contributions by)Thomas, Greg(Contributions by)Walsh, Lauren(Contributions by)
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 This collection consists of essays written by prominent African American literature, jazz, and Albert Murray scholars, reminiscences from Murray protgs and associates, and interviews with Murray himself.

It illustrates Murray's place as a central figure in African American arts and letters and as an American cultural pioneer. Born in Nokomis, Alabama, and raised in Mobile, Albert Murray graduated from TuskegeeUniversity, where he later taught, but he has long resided in New York City.

He is the author of many critically acclaimed novels, memoirs, and essay collections, among them The Omni-Americans, South to a Very Old Place, Train Whistle Guitar, The Spyglass Tree, and The Seven League Boots.

He is also a critic and visual artist, as well as a lifelong friend of and collaborator with artistic luminaries such as Ralph Ellison, Duke Ellington, and Romare Bearden.

As such, his life and work are testaments to the centrality of southern and African American aesthetics in American art.

Murray is widely viewed as a figure who, through his art and criticism, transforms the "fakelore" of white culture into a new folklore that illustrates the centrality of the blues and jazz idioms and reveals the black vernacular as what is most distinct about American art.

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Product Details
University of Alabama Press
081738488X / 9780817384883
eBook (EPUB)
813.54
26/07/2010
English
171 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
"A Pebble Hill book." Derived record based on unviewed print version record.