Although they have written in various genres, African American
writers as notable and diverse as W. E. B. Du Bois, James Baldwin,
and Alice Walker have done their most influential work in the essay
form.
The Souls of Black Folk,
The Fire Next Time,
and
In Search of Our Mothers' Gardens are landmarks in
African American literary history. Many other writers, such as
Ralph Ellison, Zora Neale Hurston, James Weldon Johnson, and
Richard Wright, are acclaimed essayists but achieved greater fame
for their work in other genres; their essay work is often
overlooked or studied only in the contexts of their better-known
works. Here Cheryl A. Wall offers the first sustained study of the
African American essay as a distinct literary genre.
Beginning with the sermons, orations, and writing of
nineteenth-century men and women like Frederick Douglass who laid
the foundation for the African American essay, Wall examines the
genre's evolution through the Harlem Renaissance. She then turns
her attention to four writers she regards as among the most
influential essayists of the twentieth century: Baldwin, Ellison,
June Jordan, and Alice Walker. She closes the book with a
discussion of the status of the essay in the twenty-first century
as it shifts its medium from print to digital in the hands of
writers like Ta-Nehisi Coates and Brittney Cooper. Wall's
beautifully written and insightful book is nothing less than a
redefinition of how we understand the genres of African American
literature.