An important study of African American contributions to contemporary
American poetry.
Aldon Nielsen's book Black Chant: Languages of African American
Postmodernism (Cambridge University Press, 1997) was a ground-breaking
work of scholarship that examined modern and postmodern developments in
the work of African American poets since the Second World War and their
contributions to both African American culture and American modernism.
Integral Music extends the terms of the studies begun in Black Chant
through a more in-depth look at the work of key writers and poets in the
decades following the Second World War. While Nielsen examines anew such
key figures as Amiri Baraka, he also provides the first extended studies
of significant but often overlooked figures in African American poetry,
such as Russell Atkins and Stephen Jonas. His essay on Bob Kaufman
points toward the critical intersection of poetry and jazz in African
American letters, as does his essay on performance poet Jayne Cortez.
Nielsen's studies in this volume affirm the importance and centrality of
African American poets to American intellectual life and international,
modernist, and postmodernist poetry today.