This section contains 1,361 words (approx. 4 pages at 400 words per page) |
Stanley Macebuh's essay offers a brief look into the background of James Baldwin and touches on the making of The Amen Corner.
James Baldwin's continuous attempts to come to terms with his inheritance in the Western world have earned him a certain genteel notoriety in the history of American letters. The passionately apocalyptic vision, the pained discomfiture in the realm of morals, the evangelistic fervor and the biblical rhetoric are elements in his writings that ultimately derive from his long apprenticeship and briefer ministry in the Black Church in Harlem. From a more technical perspective, also, the extent to which he has so far shown an ability to control the fictional form is clearly not unrelated to the rhetorical practices of the Black Ministry; but beyond the generalized and now somewhat mandatory notices that have been made between the mood of his writings and his personal history...
This section contains 1,361 words (approx. 4 pages at 400 words per page) |