Teaching Black Literature on the College Campus

Abstract

black prisoners, astonished that they could write such poetry as If We Must Die; prisoners had left a copy of the poem lying on the ground. The magazine asserted that the men of Attica passed around clandestine writings of their own; among them was a poem written by an unknown prisoner, crude but touching for its would-be heroic style.' Then Time quoted the first stanza of Claude McKay's poem, which McKay wrote to describe the lynchings in the South and which Winston Churchill

Journal
College Composition and Communication
Published
1974-10-01
DOI
10.2307/356418
CompPile
Open Access
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