

An edition of The letters of Jean Toomer, 1919-1924 (2006)
By Jean Toomer
Publish Date
2006
Publisher
University of Tennessee Press
Language
eng
Pages
249
Description:
"Considered deeply controversial because of his experimental writing style and complicated racial heritage, Jean Toomer was a major figure of the Harlem Renaissance and in the twentieth-century modernist movement. Toomer has been the focus of much research, and over the years, his letters have been widely cited by specialists on the literature of the period." "The Letters of Jean Toomer, 1919-1924, is the first-ever annotated collection of the author's correspondence. The letters included in the volume - most of which are in the Beinecke Library at Yale University - were written in the five years surrounding Toomer's publication of his seminal work, Cane. As such, they lend unique insight into the life, aesthetics, politics, and work of a central figure in American literature of the early twentieth century." "Mark Whalen's compilation offers a vital document for understanding the contexts, intellectual debates, and tensions undergirding Toomer's work, including his simultaneous feelings of attraction to and estrangement from rural southern life, the influence of technology on race and urban existence in America and the contradictory pulls of folk culture and modernist experimentation. The collection also charts the motives underlying Toomer's abandonment of the style that distinguished Cane, and his growing fascination with the teachings of the mystic G.I. Gurdjieff in 1924"--Jacket.