A New Breed of Black Consciousness interprets the literature and
politics of 1960s African American activist movements: Black Power, the
Black Arts Movement, and Black Revolutionary Nationalism. A New Breed
reassesses two decades of black militancy worldwide and growth in the
publishing of independent and mainstream black literature during the
era. Special attention is given to black feminist writers (Alice Walker,
Frances Beale, Nikki Giovanni), to activists who came of age before the
start of the 1960s (Paul Robeson, Harold Cruse, Richard Wright), and to
small journals such as Freedomways. A New Breed also examines important
literary anthologies of the period: Black Fire (Amiri Baraka and Larry
Neal, 1968), The Black Aesthetic (Addison Gayle, 1971), The Black Woman
(Toni Cade Bambara, 1970), and Understanding the New Black Poetry
(Stephen Henderson, 1973). Some of these works have long been out of
print, making this historical assessment of 1960s black literature
particularly timely. A New Breed of Black Consciousness appeals to
general readers and period specialists as an authoritatively researched
interpretation of 1960s African American literature and cultural
politics.