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Paul Robeson : The Years of Promise and Achievement
Sheila T. Boyle, Andrew BunieLog in to track your reading progress.
Overview
The son of a former slave, Paul Robeson (1898-1976) rose to become an All-American athlete, Phi Beta Kappa student, internationally celebrated singer and actor, and champion of racial equality. Yet despite his courage and many accomplishments, he could not overcome the combined effects of racism and McCarthyism. He was forced to live his last years in internal exile under FBI surveillance, without the respect he deserved. This massively researched biography takes Robeson from his humble beginnings in rural New Jersey to international fame on the eve of World War II. It presents a fully rounded picture - a portrait that corrects, supplements, and revises previous work on Robeson and his circle.Editorials
Choice
Drawing on a plethora of primary materials, including numerous original interviews, and on recent secondary works, the authors explore Robeson's family background and early struggles, through the beginnings of his successful musical and acting careers in the 1920s and his eventual triumphs in England and the US during the 1930s. Highly recommended for all libraries.Publishers Weekly
Boyle and Bunie have condensed a huge amount of research into an accessible, perceptive biography that will be essential reading for anyone interested in studies of race, performance, or theater in America.Publishers Weekly
The son of a runaway slave, Robeson was a distinguished athlete and scholar at Rutgers and attended Columbia Law School before becoming a world-famous actor. An important figure in the history of U.S. performance and politics, he disappeared from public view by the end of his life. But the past decade or so has ushered in a revival of interest: Martin Duberman's groundbreaking 1988 biography, Paul Robeson, introduced him to a new generation of scholars; it was followed by academic writings about the performer's career and politics and Paul Robeson Jr.'s "intimate, informal memoir" (The Undiscovered Paul Robeson, Forecasts, Mar. 5). Twenty years in the making, this major biography covers Robeson's life from his birth in 1898 to the early height of his career in 1939. Focusing on the role of race in the development of Robeson's radical politics (e.g., how his understanding of political solidarity was broadened by exposure to anti-Semitism as well as racism at Rutgers), and how it manifested itself in his theater work (e.g., his refusal use racially offensive language in revivals of O'Neill's The Emperor Jones), Boyle and Bunie confirm Robeson Jr.'s thesis that his father's career was cut short because of the racism and anti-leftism of the 1950s. Touching on materials and insights covered in both the books by Duberman and Robeson Jr., and providing a few new details, Boyle and Bunie have condensed a huge amount of research into an accessible, perceptive biography that will be essential reading for anyone interested in studies of race, performance or theater in America. (Aug.) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.Library Journal
Despite its great length, this new volume on one of America's most controversial performers covers only the period from Robeson's Princeton roots to his return from Russia in 1939. Based on a variety of new sources, including interviews with Robeson's contemporaries by coauthor Bunie (The Negro in Virginia Politics), this well-written volume offers a balanced picture of the artist negotiating U.S. racial attitudes and international politics. However, occasional episodes are surprisingly barren of illuminating information. For example, no mention is made of the 1935 recording sessions of "Ol' Man River" under the watchful eye of director James Whale and Robeson's alteration of the lyrics, an act that clearly showed him to be an independent thinker with a growing political awareness. Paul Robeson Jr.'s The Undiscovered Paul Robeson: An Artist's Journey, 1898-1939 (Wiley, 2001) covers precisely the same territory but is much more personally anecdotal in nature despite his oversight of the Robeson Collections. Both books are worthy supplements, though, to what remains the standard biography, Martin Duberman's Paul Robeson: A Biography (LJ 1/89). Anthony J. Adam, Prairie View A&M Univ., TX Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.Book Details
Published
September 13, 2001
Publisher
University of Massachusetts Press
Pages
568
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9781558491496