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The Young Paul Robeson: on My Journey Now
Paperback / softback
Main Details
Title |
The Young Paul Robeson: on My Journey Now
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Authors and Contributors |
By (author) Lloyd L. Brown
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Physical Properties |
Format:Paperback / softback | Pages:224 | Dimensions(mm): Height 235,Width 159 |
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Category/Genre | Drama Light orchestral and big band |
ISBN/Barcode |
9780813331775
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Classifications | Dewey:790.2092 |
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Audience | General | Professional & Vocational | |
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Publishing Details |
Publisher |
Basic Books
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Imprint |
Basic Books
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Publication Date |
6 February 1998 |
Publication Country |
United States
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Description
Famous as a football star and prizewinning student, then acclaimed as a world-class concert singer and record-breaking actor on stage and screen, Paul Robeson became one of Americas most controversial figures during the Cold War. Hailed by many as a forerunner of the civil rights movement, he was denounced by others and seen by the U. S. government as a threat to the nations security at home and abroad. Now for the first time there is an illuminating, firsthand view of this remarkable African American by a writer who is uniquely qualified to tell the story. A close friend and coworker of Robesons for twenty-five years, Lloyd L. Brown assisted in the writing of Robesons book Here I Stand. Now he has combined painstaking research with personal observation in his own book, The Young Paul Robeson. He brings to the work a graceful and engaging literary style developed over his many years as an essayist and critic on African-American literature and culture. Reflecting on interviews with Robesons schoolmates in elementary school, high school, Rutgers University, and Columbia Law School and drawing on original information from other sources, Brown provides a well-paced narrative of Robesons life, from his birth in Princeton to the budding of his artistic career in Harlem. Because Robeson always attributed his achievements to the guiding hand of his slave-born father, the Reverend William D. Robeson, Brown traced Robesons ancestral roots to North Carolina, where he found and interviewed cousins of Robeson as well as descendants of the family that had owned his father and his grandparents. Browns discovery of how William Robeson escaped to freedom and gained academic excellence is one of the many aspects of the Paul Robeson legend told here for the first time.
Author Biography
Lloyd L. Brown, an Afro-American writer and former labour organizer, journalist, and editor, is the author of the novel Iron City. A close friend of Paul Robeson for twenty-five years, Brown wrote for the Harlem newspaper Freedom, founded by Robeson in 1950, and served as Robeson's collabourator on his book Here I Stand, and numerous other writings.
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