Associate Professor of African American literature, Dr. Noelle Morrissette, recently published James Weldon Johnson's Modern Soundscapes, which "provides an evocative
and meticulously researched study of one of the best known and yet least
understood authors of the New Negro Renaissance era" (University of Iowa Press).
"Johnson, familiar to many as an early civil rights leader active in the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and an intentionally controversial writer on the subject of the significance of race in America, was one of the most prolific, wide-ranging, and yet elusive authors of twentieth-century African American literature. Drawing on archival materials such as early manuscript notes and drafts of Johnson’s unpublished and published work, Morrissette explores the author’s complex aesthetic of sound, based on black expressive culture and cosmopolitan interracial experiences" (University of Iowa Press).
"Johnson realized early in his writing career that he could draw
attention to the struggles of African Americans by using unconventional
literary methods such as the incorporation of sound into his texts. In
this groundbreaking work, literary critic Noelle Morrissette examines
how his literary representation of the extremes of sonic
experience—functioning as either cultural violence or creative
force—draws attention to the mutual contingencies and the
interdependence of American and African American cultures. Moreover,
Morrissette argues, Johnson represented these “American sounds” as a
source of multiplicity and diversity, often developing a framework for
the interracial transfer of sound. The lyricist and civil rights leader
used sound as a formal aesthetic practice in and between his works,
presenting it as an unbounded cultural practice that is as much an
interracial as it is a racially distinct cultural history" (University of Iowa Press).
Miriam Thaggert, Associate Professor of English at The University of Iowa, declares it “an engaging, thought-provoking book... [and] an important work in African American literary studies, American studies, and the growing field of sound studies.”
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