Walking in the Dark

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A01=Douglas Field
African-American literature
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Alzheimer's
Author_Douglas Field
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Beauford Delaney
Black Lives Matter
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Category=BGL
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Category=WTL
Civil Rights movement
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critical race theory
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dementia
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gay fiction
Giovanni's Room
Harlem Renaissance
identity politics
James Baldwin
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literary biography
London Review of Books
Malcolm X
Martin Luther King
mental health
No Name in the Street
Notes of a Native Son
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queer fiction
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Sonny's Blues
The Fire Next Time
Times Literary Supplement
white privilege
William F. Buckley

Product details

  • ISBN 9781526175175
  • Weight: 371g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 19 Nov 2024
  • Publisher: Manchester University Press
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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A moving exploration of the life and work of the celebrated American writer, blending biography and memoir with literary criticism.

Since James Baldwin’s death in 1987, his writing – including The Fire Next Time, one of the manifestos of the Civil Rights Movement, and Giovanni’s Room, a pioneering work of gay fiction – has only grown in relevance.

Douglas Field was introduced to Baldwin’s essays and novels by his father, who witnessed the writer’s debate with William F. Buckley at Cambridge University in 1965. In Walking in the dark, he embarks on a journey to unravel his life-long fascination and to understand why Baldwin continues to enthral us decades after his death.

Tracing Baldwin’s footsteps in France, the US and Switzerland, and digging into archives, Field paints an intimate portrait of the writer’s life and influence. At the same time, he offers a poignant account of coming to terms with his father’s Alzheimer’s disease. Interweaving Baldwin’s writings on family, illness, memory and place, Walking in the dark is an eloquent testament to the enduring power of great literature to illuminate our paths.

Douglas Field is a writer and academic who teaches American literature at the University of Manchester. He has published two books on James Baldwin, the most recent of which is All Those Strangers: The Art and Lives of James Baldwin (2015). His work has been published in Beat Scene, the Big Issue, the Guardian and the Times Literary Supplement, where he has been a regular contributor for twenty years. He is a founding editor of James Baldwin Review.

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