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Explores the recurring pattern in media, academia, and publishing to elevate one Black writer at a time, often at the expense of hundreds of others whose works go underrecognized.
Starting in the 1960s, African American writers and commentators began raising concerns that white media outlets consistently elevated only one Black writer at a time, thus limiting the broader success of multiple Black authors. Drawing on literary data work and analyzing sources like The New York Times, major anthologies, and scholarly publishing, One Black Writer at a Time finally quantifies this claim by mapping patterns of visibility disparity across genres, generations, and platforms. Exploring a dataset of 1,000 Black writers across multiple platforms, Howard and Kenton Rambsy chart the mentions, selections, and coverage of African American writers across the 20th and 21st centuries to demonstrate how the "one Black writer at a time" idea is supported by verifiable data. They trace the literary trajectories and receptions of Toni Morrison, Colson Whitehead, and Ta-Nehisi Coates, showing how disproportionate attention afforded to these writers reveals the systemic challenges Black writers face in gaining widespread and sustained recognition. At the intersections of African American literary studies and digital humanities, this book merges textual interpretations and computational methods, enabling new discoveries in the study of American literature. Ultimately, One Black Writer at a Time calls for more inclusive approaches to studying, curating, and teaching African American literature that account for the full breadth of Black literary production.Howard Rambsy II, Distinguished Research Professor of Literature at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, USA, specializes in African American literature and comic books. He is the author of The Black Arts Enterprise (2011) and Bad Men: Creative Touchstones of Black Writers (2020) and the creator of the podcast Remarkable Receptions.
Kenton Rambsy is Associate Professor of African American Literature and Digital Humanities at Howard University, USA. He is the author of The Geographies of African American Short Fiction (2022).Thanks for subscribing!
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