This section contains 236 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page) |
[In The Wayward and the Seeking] race is unequivocally the overriding preoccupation of Jean Toomer's life: not Blackness or even being a Negro, but having (or having to have) a race at all. For a man who apparently had no more Negro blood than Dumas père or Pushkin, the drop or two that he does, or might have … bedevils his days and his intellect. (p. 1)
What makes Toomer's position on race so interesting to speculate on, is the fact that the best work he did came from three months in Sparta, Georgia, during which he identified with "black people, life and soul."… Of the stories included here, "Withered Skin of Berries" is quite the best, rivaling easily the heights achieved in Cane. But it was Toomer's artistic and racial sensitivity that made him so expert in rendering the machinations of race and color-as-class. He has indisputably keen...
This section contains 236 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page) |