In this first book-length study of Charles Johnson's work, Jonathan Little offers an engaging account of the artistic growth of one of the most important contemporary African American writers. From his beginnings as a political cartoonist through his receipt of the National Book Award for Middle Passage, Johnson's imagination has become increasingly spiritual. Little draws upon a wide array of sources, including short stories, interviews, reviews, articles, and cartoons, as he traces the brilliant achievement of this provocative artist who is very much at the height of his career. Charles Johnson's Spiritual Imagination begins with an analysis of Johnson's political cartoons from the late sixties and early seventies, when he was immersed in the Black Power Movement. Little shows that in these early cartoons one can already see Johnson's comic genius and his quest for unconstrained artistic freedom even when dealing with the highly charged issues of racial politics. By examining how Johnson incorporates the influences of phenomenology, Zen Buddhism, Taoism, Hinduism, and Romanticism into a strikingly original perspective on individual and social identity, Little chronicles Johnson's development. The book illuminates the progression of Johnson's aesthetics as he deals with the at times disturbing contrast between the hope offered by art and spirituality and the harsh realities of African American existence. As he situates Johnson within the tradition of African American literature, Little pairs each of his novels with a major precursor, including novels by Richard Wright and Ralph Ellison, and such far-ranging sources as Hermann Hesse's Siddhartha and the Ten Oxherding Pictures. These comparisons help to show Johnson's innovations within the African American literary tradition and include discussions of naturalism, realism, and modernism. This book will appeal to anyone interested in African American literature, spirituality, aesthetics, and the culture wars.
Johnson as author , in his original use of form , and Andrew Hawkins , in his discovery of freedom within a community of others , are thereby mirror images . As Johnson explains in an interview about the book , his philosophical theme ...
William Gleason , " The Liberation of Perception : Charles Johnson's Oxherding Tale , ” Black American Literature Forum 25 , no . 4 ( Winter 1991 ) . See also Jonathan Little's Charles Johnson's Spiritual Imagination ( Columbia ...
Johnson, Charles. Turning the Wheel (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 2003). Josipovici, Gabriel. The World and the Book: The Study of Modern Fiction (London: Macmillan, 1971). Little, Jonathan. Charles Johnson's Spiritual Imagination ...
... and profound apprehension of a fundamental spiritual unity that revises individual identity and conventional categories of perception” (Little, Charles Johnson's Spiritual Imagination 143)—in short, in various metaphorical manners.
Ed . William L. Andrews . New York : Penguin , 1992. I - 13 . The House behind the Cedars . 1900. New York : Penguin , 1993 . The Marrow of Tradition . 1901. Ann Arbor : University of Michigan Press , 1969 . “ Po ' Sandy . ” 1899.
“selfdetermination” was a popular slogan during the 1960s and 1970s among groups of people struggling for greater social equality. Another clue that “Menagerie, a Child's Fable” takes place during the Civil Rights era is the fact that ...
Although neither Johnson nor Jen maintain a consistently comic tone in their novels , their comic articulations comprise a dominant part of their novels ' ethos . 10. ... Little , Charles Johnson's Spiritual Imagination , 48-49 . 20.
Little, Charles Johnson's Spiritual Imagination, 103; Byrd, Charles Johnson's Novels, 94–95. For additional interpretations of the centrality of Buddhism and related Eastern philosophies in Oxherding Tale, see Gleason, “Liberation of ...
Tricia Rose , Black Noise : Rap Music and Black Culture in Contemporary America ( Middletown , Conn .: Wesleyan University Press , 1994 ) , 1–2 . 1. " Rookie's Rapture : Sheneska Jackson Hits It Big.
As this collection of interviews suggests, the novelist is as multifaceted and complex as his novels.