Call and Response: The Riverside Anthology of the African American Literary Tradition

Call and Response: The Riverside Anthology of the African American Literary Tradition
Author Patricia Liggins Hill (general editor), Bernard W. Bell (editor), Trudier Harris (editor), William J. Harris (editor), R. Baxter Miller (editor), Sondra A. O'Neale (editor)
Country United States
Language English
Subject African American literature
Genre Anthology
Publisher Houghton Mifflin Company
Publication date
April 1997 (1st edition)
Media type Hardcover, paperback, Audio CD, CD-ROM
Pages 2,039
ISBN 978-0-395-88404-1 (1st edition hardcover)
OCLC 37276956
810.8/0896073 21
LC Class PS508.N3 C56 1998

Call and Response: The Riverside Anthology of the African American Literary Tradition is a compilation of literary and cultural works that originated from call and response patterns in African and African-American cultural traditions. The 1997 anthology includes works representing the centuries-long emergence of this distinctly Black literary and cultural aesthetic in fiction, poetry, drama, essays, sermons, speeches, criticism, journals, and song lyrics from spirituals to rap. Writings ranging from Queen Latifah to Phyllis Wheatley and LeRoi Jones are included within this volume.

The anthology, published by the Houghton Mifflin Company, organizes its selections around three themes: the pattern of call and response, the journey toward freedom, and major historical events in the African-American experience. The anthology editors have woven together selections, critical analysis of the texts, historical background, and biographies into a scholarly, unified, and chronological approach to African-American literature and culture. Dr. Patricia Liggins Hill of the University of San Francisco served as general editor of the anthology.

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