Carolus Waddell Chesnutt
Carolus Waddell Chesnutt (20 Iunii 1858—17 Novembris 1932) fuit scriptor, scriptor commentariorum, agitator politicus, et iurisconsultus Americanus, qui mythistoriis et fabulis brevibus multiplices identitatis phylae et societatis res in Meridiana post bellum explorantibus innotuit.[1] Duo ex eius libris accommodati sunt pelliculae mutae annis 1926 et 1927 ab Anschario Micheaux, moderatore et productore Afroamericano. Post motum iurum civilium saeculi vicensimi, studium operum Chesnuttianorum refotum est. Nonnulli ex eis libris in novis editionibus prolati sunt, et novam agnitionem accepit. Pittacium cursuale commemorativum anno 2008 impressum est.
Chesnutt Clevelandiae Ohii saeculo 20 ineunte persperum condidit negotium iudiciorum transcriptorum, quod plurimum eius quaestus effecit. Impiger Societatis Nationalis pro Progressu Hominum Coloratorum sodalis factus est, commentariosque educationem Afroamericanorum et leges discriminatorias eversas suadentis scripsit. Eius scriptis stilo et rebus descriptis sunt proprietates coloris loci et realismi litterarii.
Chesnutt obiit 15 Novembris 1932, anno aetatis suae septuagensimus quarto. Corpus in Sepulcreto Lake View sepultum est.
Opera selectaRecensere
- The Conjure Woman, and Other Conjure Tales (1899)
- The Wife of His Youth and Other Stories of the Color-Line (1899)
- "The Wife of His Youth"
- "The Passing of Grandison"
- Frederick Douglass (1899)
- The House Behind the Cedars (1900), mythistoria
- The Marrow of Tradition (1901), mythistoria
- The Colonel's Dream (1905), mythistoria
Opera sine auctoris nomine editaRecensere
- A Business Career (2005), University Press of Mississippi
- Mandy Oxendine (1997)
- Paul Marchand, F.M.C. (1998), University Press of Mississippi
- Evelyn's Husband (2005), University Press of Mississippi
CorporaRecensere
- 2002.Stories, Novels and Essays: The Conjure Woman, The Wife of His Youth & Other Stories of the Color Line, The House Behind the Cedars, The Marrow of Tradition, Uncollected Stories, Selected Essays. Ed. Werner Sollors. Library of America. ISBN 9781931082068.
Opera in pelliculis accommodataRecensere
- 1926. The Conjure Woman, accommodata ab Anschario Micheaux in pellicula The Spider's Web
- 1927. The House Behind the Cedars, accommodata ab Anschario Micheaux in pellicula The Millionaire
- 2008. "The Doll," accommodata a Dante James, scholare in Universitate Dukiana, in pellicula eiusdem nominis.[2] Fabula primum anno 1912 prolata est, in The Crisis.[3][4]
Nexus interni
- Litterae Afroamericanae
- The Conjure Woman (pellicula Anscharii Micheaux)
- The House Behind the Cedars (pellicula Anscharii Micheaux)
NotaeRecensere
- ↑ Multae familiae hominum liberorum coloris temporibus coloniarum et aetatis foederalistae formatae sunt; nonnullae educationem et bona adeptae sunt; praeterea fuerunt servi phylae mixtae, qui liberti post bellum fuerunt partes multiplicis Meridianae societatis.
- ↑ "Dante James", Film/Video/Digital, Duke University.
- ↑ The Crisis, 3 (Aprili): 248–252; reimpressa in Short Fiction (1974): 405–412. Etiam prolata in Tales of Conjure and the Color Line: 10 Stories (1998): 109–117.
- ↑ Dante James: "The Doll" Interview, Insight News.
BibliographiaRecensere
- Andrews, William. 1980. The Literary Career of Charles W. Chesnutt. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.
- Chesnutt, Helen M. 1952. Charles Waddell Chesnutt: Pioneer of the Color Line. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.
- Gates, Henry Louis, Jr., et Nellie Y. McKay, eds. 2004. Charles Waddell Chesnutt. In The Norton Anthology of African American Literature, ed. wa. Novi Eboraci: W. W. Norton & Company.
- Keller, Frances Richardson. 1978. An American Crusade: The Life of Charles Waddell Chesnutt. Provo Utae: Brigham Young University Press. ISBN 0842508376.
- Koy, Christopher 2011. “African American Vernacular Latin and Ovidian Figures in Charles Chesnutt’s Conjure Stories” Litteraria Pragensia – Reappraising the Black Literary Tradition 21:41 (July 2011): 50-70.
- McLemee, Scotties. 2002. The Anger and the Irony. Chronicle of Higher Education, 1 Martii.
Nexus externiRecensere
Vicimedia Communia plura habent quae ad Carolum Waddell Chesnutt spectant. |
- "Charles W. Chesnutt", Library of America
- Charles W. Chesnutt, The Marrow of Tradition
- Charles W. Chesnutt, The House Behind the Cedars
- The Charles W. Chesnutt Digital Archive, Sarah Browners, Berea College in cooperation with Fisk University Library
- Chesnutt Literary Web, Rutgers University
- Frederick Douglass, Boston: Small, Maynard, 1899, hosted on Documents of the American South, University of North Carolina
- Chesnutt's "Sister Becky's Pickaninny", dramatizatio VHS
- The Charles Chesnutt Digital Archive
- Charles W. Chesnutt stamp by United States