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African Culture and Melville's Art
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Table of Contents

Introduction
1: The Tambourine in Glory
2: Benito Cereno and Moby Dick
3: The Hatchet-Polishers, Benito Cereno, and Amasa Delano
4: Cheer and Gloom: Frederick Douglass and Herman Melville on Slave Music and Dance
Appendix: Chapter XVI from Captain Amasa Delano's A Narrative of Voyages and Travels

About the Author

Sterling Stuckey is Distinguished Professor Emeritus of History at University Of California, Riverside. He is the author of the groundbreaking studies Slave Culture: Nationalist Theory and the Foundations of Black America and Going through the Storm: The Influence of African American Art in History, both published by Oxford University Press.

Reviews

"Revisiting Melville's New York and Albany neighborhoods, Sterling Stuckey has given us a stunning reconstruction of the genesis of Moby-Dick and Benito Cereno. His Melville is an 'Africanist' in the best sense: in frequent contact with Ashantee culture, and inspired by the music and dance of the slaves to forge his own poetics of cheer and gloom." --Wai Chee Dimock, Yale University
"In African Culture and Melville's Art, Sterling Stuckey brings his extraordinary talents as a historian and critic to bear on Herman Melville, and in the process he gives us brilliant and original readings of Moby-Dick, Benito Cereno, and Melville's world. It is a stunning achievement and should be required reading for anyone interested in American culture."-John Stauffer, Harvard University
"Studying Melville's artful treatment of Douglass, Dupuis, Delano, and Bowditch,
Professor Stuckey expands and deepens our knowledge of Melville's creative employment of African culture in Benito Cereno and Moby-Dick. Stuckey's book is full of discoveries along freshly mapped paths that invite our further investigation." --Frederick Bernard, Aquinas College
"Our greatest scholar of African American culture finds a kindred spirit in our greatest nineteenth-century novelist. If you want to know how African the roots of American culture are, from the blues to Melville, this marvelous, adventuresome and elegant book is for you." --David R. Roediger, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
"With the eloquence of a poet and the erudition of a scholar, historian Sterling Stuckey employs cross-disciplinary methods in this brilliant analysis of the African sources and intertextual resonances in Herman Melville's oeuvre. This definitive study deepens our understanding of the writer's creative genius." - -Miriam DeCosta-Willis, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
"Alone among major white American writers of the nineteenth century, Melville deployed creatively, sensitively, and without the then fashionable cultural condescension, a compelling black presence at the heart of some of his most morally challenging and important fiction. By skillfully and persuasively tracking the cultural sources available to the novelist by way of informing and fleshing out that inspiration, Stuckey deepens, enriches, and enlarges our
understanding and appreciation of Melville's accomplishments." --Ekwueme Michael Thelwell, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
"Stuckey's African Culture and Melville's Art presents new and welcomed perspectives for Melville studies. His biographical, cultural, and intertextual analyses uncover interesting and relevant information. Ultimately, Stuckey sheds some light on the shrouded and compelling craft of one of America's finest writers." --Suite101.com
"[A] considerable achievement...In his attention especially to race and social history, to the global contexts for American authorship, and the interplay of American exceptionalism and transnationalism, Stuckey contributes significantly to an ongoing amplification of the boundaries of Melville criticism and of American literary studies generally." --College Literature
"Stuckey concludes with a brilliant elucidation of the blues and spirituals in which he makes connections to Hegel and Frederick Douglass. The importance of this book extends beyond Melville studies to any field in which race matters. Essential." --Choice
"Stuckey's American Culture and Melville's Art is a very important contribution to interdisciplinary scholarship because it establishes major connections between African culture and Melville's Redburn: His First Voyage, Moby-Dick, and Benito Cereno...By considering these writings as vital historical and anthropological sources, Stuckey suggests the important role that interdisciplinary scholarships can have in the study of the
relations between Africa and its parental cultures in the United States." --Southwest Journal of Cultures

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