August Wilson's Joe Turner's Come and Gone

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A01=Ladrica Menson-Furr
African American experience
African American migration
African American Spiritual
African American vernacular performance analysis
African American Vernacular Tradition
African American Work Songs
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American Century Cycle
August Wilson
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Barrymore Theatre
blues music influence
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Danai Gurira
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Drama's Foundations
Drama’s Foundations
Emancipation Proclamation
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Ethel Barrymore Theatre
folk tradition theatre
Great Migration drama
identity formation in plays
King Hedley II
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Lincoln Center Theater
Ma Rainey's Black Bottom
Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom
Main Character
Mason Dixon Line
modern drama studies
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Pittsburgh Cycle
post-slavery cultural history
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Robert Church
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Twentieth Century African Americans
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Wilson's Play
Wilsonian Actors
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Product details

  • ISBN 9781138210097
  • Weight: 160g
  • Dimensions: 119 x 172mm
  • Publication Date: 03 Jun 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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"Herald Loomis, you shining! You shining like new money!" - Bynum Walker

August Wilson considered Joe Turner’s Come and Gone (1984) to be his favourite play of the ten in his award-winning Pittsburgh Cycle. It is a drama that truly examines the roots, crossroads, and intersections of African, American, and African American culture. Its characters and choral griots interweave the intricate tropes of migration from the south to the north, the effects of slavery, black feminism and masculinity, and Wilson's theme of finding one's "song" or identity. This book gives readers an overview of the work from its inception on through its revisions and stagings in regional theatres and on Broadway, exploring its use of African American vernacular genres—blues music, folk songs, folk tales, and dance—and nineteenth-century southern post-Reconstruction history.

Ladrica Menson-Furr presents Joe Turner's Come and Gone as a historical drama, a blues drama, an American drama, a Great Migration drama, and the finest example of Wilson's gift for relocating the African American experience in urban southern cities at the beginning and not the end of the African American experience.

Ladrica Menson-Furr is Director of African and African American Studies and Associate Professor of African American Literature at the University of Memphis. She is the author of August Wilson’s Fences (2008) and several articles on the works of August Wilson, Zora Neal Hurston, and Pearl Cleage.

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