
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
Between 1967 and 1972, a previously obscure group of authors entered the US cultural spotlight. During this five-year period, at least thirty anthologies of poetry and prose by African American, Latinx, Asian American, and Native American children came out of adult-led workshops, classrooms, and sites of juvenile incarceration. Mass-market publishers, independent imprinters, and local mimeograph machines produced volumes with titles such as I Am Somebody! and The Me Nobody Knows: Children's Voices from the Ghetto. These young writers actively participated in the Black Arts Movement, and some collaborated with well-known adult authors, most prominently June Jordan. Their anthologies gained national media coverage, occasionally became bestsellers, were quoted by James Baldwin, and even inspired a hit Broadway musical. While writings by children had long attracted adult attention, this flurry of youth writing and publishing was distinguished by the widespread belief that children of color from poor and working-class neighborhoods were uniquely able to speak truth about American racism and inequality.
Focusing on Black and Latinx youth authorship within New York City, and using deep archival research and elegant close readings, Amy Fish examines child-authored texts of this era within the context of their literary production and reception. These young writers were often supervised and edited by white adults, raising concerns about the authenticity and agency of their voices. Fish contends that young authors themselves shared these concerns and that they employed savvy rhetorical strategies of address, temporality, and trope to self-consciously interrogate the perils and possibilities of their adult-influenced work. Young writers thus contributed to the era's important debates about the nature of authorship and readership within a racist society, while also using their writing as an intimate occasion of self-discovery.
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Information
Table of contents
- CoverÂ
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- ContentsÂ
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction A Youth Writing Movement
- Chapter 1 Poetic Self-Witness: Second-Person Plays in the Voice of the Children
- Chapter 2 Telling Time: Anti-Racist Temporalities in the Classroom
- Chapter 3 Agency in Absentia: The Me Nobody Knows Onstage
- Chapter 4 âCriticism Is Out of the Questionâ: The Adult Reception of Childrenâs Writing
- Epilogue The Long Walks of Youth Writing
- Notes
- Index