Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

The Greenwood Encyclopedia of African American Folklore

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Language
  
Media type
  
Book, hardcover

Author
  
Anand Prahlad

Editor
  
Anand Prahlad


Publication date
  
12-30-2005

Originally published
  
30 December 2005

Country
  
United States of America

Genres
  
Geography, Folklore

The Greenwood Encyclopedia of African American Folklore t0gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcTQC6DHMzX0kEQ5D

Series
  
Volume I: A-FVolume II: G-PVolume III: Q-Z

Subject
  
African-American/Black Culture

Pages
  
v. 1. A-F, v. 2. G-P,v. 3. Q-Z: 1672

Publisher
  
Greenwood Publishing Group (Westport, CT)

Similar
  
Fairy Tales and Feminism, The Oxford Companion to Fairy T, The Secret Life of a Black Asp, As Good as Mango, African‑American Proverbs in Context

The Greenwood Encyclopedia of African American Folklore is a three volume set of books published in December 2005 by Greenwood Press. It contains roughly 700 alphabetically arranged entries by more than 100 contributors. It serves as a comprehensive overview of all aspects of African-American folklore including folktales, music, foodways, spiritual beliefs, and art.

Contents

Background

The Greenwood Encyclopedia of African American is unique in being the definitive encyclopedia relating to African-American traditions, background, and mores; a comprehensive overview of African-American culture and folklore. It contains alphabetically arranged entries and expert contributors on topics such as folktales, music, art, foodways, spiritual beliefs, proverbs, and many other subjects. Entries cite works for further reading and the encyclopedia concludes with a bibliography of major works.

The set of books also gives attention to the Caribbean and African roots of traditional African-American culture. The three volumes are intended to help scholars and students understand the heart of African-American culture and provides a comprehensive context for African-American history, literature, music, and art.

Reviews

"The fact that more than 100 entries are devoted to scholars and collectors, among them Imamu Amiri Baraka, Zora Neale Hurston, and Melville J. Herskovits, supports a statement Prahlad makes in the introduction. The encyclopedia seeks 'to provide a significant overview of the current study of African American folklore.... [This] first comprehensive general reference work' on African American folklore is highly recommended for academic and public libraries."

"The multidisciplinary nature of folklore studies is reflected in the list of 140 or so primarily academic contributors, whose areas of expertise include art, literature, anthropology, religion, and more....(the entries) make fascinating reading on topics as diverse as samba, the Sea Islands, sermons, Tupac Shakur, Stagolee, and the steel pan drum...."

Booklist, Starred Review

References

The Greenwood Encyclopedia of African American Folklore Wikipedia


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