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  • HARLEM RENAISSANCE: Art of Black America. by [Campbell, Mary Schmidt, introduction; essays by David Driskell, David Levering Lewis and Deborah Willis Ryan.]
    [Campbell, Mary Schmidt, introduction; essays by David Driskell, David Levering Lewis and Deborah Willis Ryan.]
    HARLEM RENAISSANCE: Art of Black America.

    Edition: First printing.

    New York: The Studio Museum in Harlem / Harry N. Abrams, 1987. dj. Hardcover first edition - A beautifully produced book, large format with 140 illustrations including 55 plates in full color. Included are the words of painters Aaron Douglas, Palmer Hayden, and William H. Johnson, sculptor Meta Warrick Fuller and photographer James Van Der Zee and much more. Chronology of the Harlem Renaissance from 1919 to 1929, chronologies of the artists and an index. 200 pp. ISBN: 0-8109-10993.

    Condition: Fine in fine dust jacket.

    Book ID: 68374
    View cart More details Price: $75.00
  • BLACK MAGIC. by Morand, Paul (1888-1976)
    Morand, Paul (1888-1976)
    BLACK MAGIC.

    Edition: First US printing.

    New York: The Viking Press, 1929. Hardcover first edition - A member of the French diplomatic service, Morand become friends with Carl Van Vechten in New York in 1925-27 and in 1927-28 he traveled though the Southern U.S. and the Caribbean, including Martinique, Trinidad, Haiti, Jamaica, and Cuba. In 1928 Morand went to French colonial possessions in Africa, including Dakar (Senegal), French Guinea, French Sudan and Timbuktu, among other places -or, as he ended his preface to this book "30,000 miles. 28 Negro countries." Magie Noire or Black Magic is a collection of stories or vignettes, supposedly based on these travels. A few involve voodoo, and several are stories of 'passing' or attempting to pass as white, but all…

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    New York: The Viking Press, 1929. Hardcover first edition - A member of the French diplomatic service, Morand become friends with Carl Van Vechten in New York in 1925-27 and in 1927-28 he traveled though the Southern U.S. and the Caribbean, including Martinique, Trinidad, Haiti, Jamaica, and Cuba. In 1928 Morand went to French colonial possessions in Africa, including Dakar (Senegal), French Guinea, French Sudan and Timbuktu, among other places -or, as he ended his preface to this book "30,000 miles. 28 Negro countries." Magie Noire or Black Magic is a collection of stories or vignettes, supposedly based on these travels. A few involve voodoo, and several are stories of 'passing' or attempting to pass as white, but all are about black people, often depicted in grotesque or stereotypical ways, and despite being illustrated by the noted Harlem Renaissance artist, Aaron Douglas, and the comment by the translator expressing gratitude to noted civil rights activist and author Walter White for his assistance, the underlying racism of this book is indisputable. A contemporary review in the NY Times noted that Morand "takes the black races as material for esthetic effects, for a smooth high-geared prose that is modern in its surface aspects and not particularly searching" while a more recent critic commented even when it "recounts various injustices which African-Americans have suffered at the hands of white Americans - including lynchings and sundown towns - the focus of the story is not on the real injustices against Black people, but on the negative portrayal of Black people in striving for economic success and political equality." Translated from the French by Hamish Miles. Striking full page illustrations by Douglas at the beginning of each story make this book worthwhile. 218 pp.

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    Condition: Very good in decorative paper covered boards with a black cloth spine, and gold paper label on spine. Some rubbing and wear to edges of boards, but overall a tight and clean copy, no dust jacket.

    Book ID: 87946
    View cart More details Price: $40.00