The period between 1880 and 1918, at the end of which Jim Crow was
firmly established and the Great Migration of African Americans was
well under way, was not the nadir for black culture, James
Smethurst reveals, but instead a time of profound response from
African American intellectuals.
The African American Roots of
Modernism explores how the Jim Crow system triggered
significant artistic and intellectual responses from African
American writers, deeply marking the beginnings of literary
modernism and, ultimately, notions of American modernity.
In identifying the Jim Crow period with the coming of modernity,
Smethurst upsets the customary assessment of the Harlem Renaissance
as the first nationally significant black arts movement, showing
how artists reacted to Jim Crow with migration narratives, poetry
about the black experience, black performance of popular culture
forms, and more. Smethurst introduces a whole cast of characters,
including understudied figures such as William Stanley Braithwaite
and Fenton Johnson, and more familiar authors such as Charles
Chesnutt, Pauline Hopkins, and James Weldon Johnson. By considering
the legacy of writers and artists active between the end of
Reconstruction and the rise of the Harlem Renaissance, Smethurst
illuminates their influence on the black and white U.S. modernists
who followed.