Tag Archives: Black Writing from Chicago
Hoyt W. Fuller: Voluntary Exiles
Hoyt W. Fuller (1923 – 1981) was one of the most revered figures in Chicago literary history, publishing articles and criticism for Negro Digest and Black World, the Chicago Defender, Tribune and Sun-Times, The Nation, the New Republic, and many … Continue reading
Posted in Black Writers, Chicago Writing, Diversity & Multiculturalism, Social Change
Tagged Addison Gayle, black bourgeois, black middleclass, Black Writing from Chicago, Ebony, Frantz Fanon, Hoyt W. Fuller, Johnson Publishing, Journey to Africa, Negro Digest, Sekou Toure, Teaching Diversity, whiteness
Leave a comment
Leonidas Berry and the Strength of Black Families
In 1981, after a successful career as an M.D. specializing in gastroenterology, Leonidas Berry wrote I Wouldn’t Take Nothing for My Journey Now: Two Centuries of an Afro-American Minister’s Family. The title echoes a famous black spiritual, a testament of … Continue reading
Posted in Black Writers, Chicago Writing, Diversity & Multiculturalism, Social Change
Tagged Black Writing from Chicago, Daniel Patrick Moynihan, Herbert Gutman, I Wouldn't Take Nothing for My Journey Now, Judith Berry Griffin, Leonidas Berry, Pathways to College, Ralph Ellison, Ta-Nehisi Coates, The Black Family in Slavery and Freedom
Leave a comment