The Autobiography of an Ex-colored Man

James Weldon Johnson

The Autobiography of an Ex-colored Man
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Dover Publications Inc.
Country
United States
Published
10 May 1995
Pages
112
ISBN
9780486285122

The Autobiography of an Ex-colored Man

James Weldon Johnson

African-American writer’s pioneering novel parallels his own life, probes the psychological aspects of passing for white, and examines the American caste and class system. Major contribution to American literature. One of the most prominent African-Americans of his time, James Weldon Johnson (1871 1938) was a successful lawyer, educator, social reformer, songwriter, and critic. But it was as a poet and novelist that he achieved lasting fame. Among his most famous works, The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man in many ways parallels Johnson’s own remarkable life. First published in 1912, the novel relates, through an anonymous narrator, events in the life of an American of mixed ethnicity whose exceptional abilities and ambiguous appearance allow him unusual social mobility - from the rural South to the urban North and eventually to Europe. A radical departure from earlier books by black authors, this pioneering work not only probes the psychological aspects of passing for white but also examines the American caste and class system. The human drama is powerful and revealing - from the narrator’s persistent battles with personal demons to his firsthand observations of a Southern lynching and the mingling of races in New York’s bohemian atmosphere at the turn of the century. Revolutionary for its time, the Autobiography remains both an unrivaled example of black expression and a major contribution to American literature.

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