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Genre/Form: | Criticism, interpretation, etc |
---|---|
Material Type: | Government publication, State or province government publication |
Document Type: | Book |
All Authors / Contributors: |
Brian Russell Roberts |
ISBN: | 9780813933689 0813933684 9780813933672 0813933676 9780813933696 0813933692 |
OCLC Number: | 808810664 |
Description: | xii, 231 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm |
Contents: | The Negro beat: "distinguished colored men" and their representative characters -- Passing into diplomacy: US Consul James Weldon Johnson and the autobiography of an ex-colored man -- Diplomatic and modern representations: George Washington Ellis, Henry Francis Downing, and the myth of Africa -- Metonymies of absence andpresence: Angelina Weld Grimke's Rachel -- Diplomats but ersatz: the hip-to-matic Pan-Africanismof W.E.B. Du Bois and Ida Gibbs Hunt -- The practice of hip-to-macy in the age of public diplomacy: Richard Wright's Indonesian travels -- Epilogue: hipster diplomacy's fall and Barack Obama's forms of things unknown. |
Responsibility: | Brian Russell Roberts. |
Reviews
Publisher Synopsis
Brian Roberts takes the adventurous reader on a dazzling, intellectually challenging roller coaster ride. He juxtaposes the literary and diplomatic endeavors of a variety of African American internationalists (Frederick Douglass, James Weldon Johnson, Angelina Weld Grimk�, and Ida Gibbs Hunt among them) of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries and analyzes both their evolving creative output and their governmental missions. Roberts skillfully maneuvers us through the global shoals those men and women navigated and astounds us with their earlier, and his own present-day, daring. Artistic Ambassadors provides both serious mental exercise and an exciting interdisciplinary romp, seen from new perspectives and with new eyes, through African American history and literature.--Adele Logan Alexander, author of Parallel Worlds: The Remarkable Gibbs-Hunts and the Enduring (In)significance of Melanin A revelatory exploration of the chasms and bridges between black internationalism and U.S. diplomacy in the twentieth century. With remarkable archival ingenuity, Brian Roberts explores the resonances between literary representation and political representation, above all in a set of powerful readings of the ways some of the major works of the African American literary tradition--by James Weldon Johnson, W. E. B. Du Bois, Claude McKay, and Angelina Weld Grimk�, among others--were written in the shadow of diplomacy, even when they might at first seem to be merely 'domestic.' Artistic Ambassadors forces us to reconsider the literary writing of overlooked black diplomats (George Washington Ellis, Henry Francis Downing) as well as to recontextualize the work of 'ersatz' diplomats such as Ida Gibbs Hunt and Richard Wright who aimed to influence international politics without taking on official diplomatic posts.--Brent Hayes Edwards, author of The Practice of Diaspora What makes Roberts's book so compelling in the context of studies of black transnationalism is his focus on figures... who were caught in the intricate nexus of acquiescence to the state and, at times, principled opposition to it.... The somewhat anomalous position of these diplomats makes them prime sources for scrutinizing how far the bonds--and the breaks--of the international may take us.... Reflecting upon the rich histories of those who shuttled between these poles of negotiation may be our best hope of articulating provisional solutions and avoiding the pitfalls of the past.--Kate Baldwin "American Literary History " Brian Roberts's Artistic Ambassadors is an essential book for understanding transnationalism in African American modernity. Roberts shows us how the diverse international work of African American intellectuals--from consular work for the State Department to anti-imperialist Pan-Africanism--informed African American culture and politics long before our current debates about globalization.--John Carlos Rowe, University of Southern California, author of Literary Culture and U.S. Imperialism: From the Revolution to World War II This well-written and thoroughly researched study sits at the intersection of works on the cultures of U.S. imperialism and works on black transnationalism. It is distinctive in identifying the ways blackness and empire, as racial and political formations, have been intertwined with rather than antagonistic to each other, race with empire rather than against it. Artistic Ambassadors offers an alternative trajectory to civil rights in African American political culture, one that sits both within the state and without domestic space, contextualizing the later rise of Ralph Bunche but also certain elements of Barack Obama's presidency. Artistic Ambassadors also provides a crucial missing link in understanding why certain forms of self-determined, New Negro, black masculine identity rested on the notion of racial representativeness, as Roberts tracks the journey from 'Negro representative' abroad to 'representative Negro' at home.--Michelle Stephens, author of Black Empire: The Masculine Global Imaginary of Caribbean Intellectuals in the United States, 1914-1962 What makes Roberts's book so compelling in the context of studies of black transnationalism is his focus on figures... who were caught in the intricate nexus of acquiescence to the state and, at times, principled opposition to it.... The somewhat anomalous position of these diplomats makes them prime sources for scrutinizing how far the bonds and the breaks of the international may take us.... Reflecting upon the rich histories of those who shuttled between these poles of negotiation may be our best hope of articulating provisional solutions and avoiding the pitfalls of the past.--Kate Baldwin "American Literary History "" Brian Roberts's "Artistic Ambassadors" is an essential book for understanding transnationalism in African American modernity. Roberts shows us how the diverse international work of African American intellectuals from consular work for the State Department to anti-imperialist Pan-Africanism informed African American culture and politics long before our current debates about globalization.--John Carlos Rowe, University of Southern California, author of "Literary Culture and U.S. Imperialism: From the Revolution to World War II"" A revelatory exploration of the chasms and bridges between black internationalism and U.S. diplomacy in the twentieth century. With remarkable archival ingenuity, Brian Roberts explores the resonances between literary representation and political representation, above all in a set of powerful readings of the ways some of the major works of the African American literary tradition by James Weldon Johnson, W. E. B. Du Bois, Claude McKay, and Angelina Weld Grimke, among others were written in the shadow of diplomacy, even when they might at first seem to be merely 'domestic.' "Artistic Ambassadors" forces us to reconsider the literary writing of overlooked black diplomats (George Washington Ellis, Henry Francis Downing) as well as to recontextualize the work of 'ersatz' diplomats such as Ida Gibbs Hunt and Richard Wright who aimed to influence international politics without taking on official diplomatic posts.--Brent Hayes Edwards, author of "The Practice of Diaspora"" This well-written and thoroughly researched study sits at the intersection of works on the cultures of U.S. imperialism and works on black transnationalism. It is distinctive in identifying the ways blackness and empire, as racial and political formations, have been intertwined with rather than antagonistic to each other, race with empire rather than against it. "Artistic Ambassadors "offers an alternative trajectory to civil rights in African American political culture, one that sits both within the state and without domestic space, contextualizing the later rise of Ralph Bunche but also certain elements of Barack Obama's presidency. "Artistic Ambassadors" also provides a crucial missing link in understanding why certain forms of self-determined, New Negro, black masculine identity rested on the notion of racial representativeness, as Roberts tracks the journey from 'Negro representative' abroad to 'representative Negro' at home.--Michelle Stephens, author of "Black Empire: The Masculine Global Imaginary of Caribbean Intellectuals in the United States, 1914-1962" Brian Roberts takes the adventurous reader on a dazzling, intellectually challenging roller coaster ride. He juxtaposes the literary and diplomatic endeavors of a variety of African American internationalists (Frederick Douglass, James Weldon Johnson, Angelina Weld Grimke, and Ida Gibbs Hunt among them) of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries and analyzes both their evolving creative output and their governmental missions. Roberts skillfully maneuvers us through the global shoals those men and women navigated and astounds us with their earlier, and his own present-day, daring. "Artistic Ambassadors" provides both serious mental exercise and an exciting interdisciplinary romp, seen from new perspectives and with new eyes, through African American history and literature.--Adele Logan Alexander, author of "Parallel Worlds: The Remarkable Gibbs-Hunts and the Enduring (In)significance of Melanin" Read more...


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Related Subjects:(11)
- American literature -- African American authors -- History and criticism.
- African American diplomats.
- African Americans -- Intellectual life -- 19th century.
- African Americans -- Intellectual life -- 20th century.
- African Americans -- Intellectual life.
- American literature -- African American authors.
- Diplomatie.
- Geistesleben.
- Literatur.
- Schwarze.
- USA.