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Field name | Value |
---|---|
Title | Interview with Haki Madhubuti |
Library | Henry Hampton Collection, Film & Media Archive, Washington University Libraries |
Collection Name | Henry Hampton Collection |
Collection Overview | These oral history interviews are part of the 'I'll Make Me A World: African-American Artists in the 20th Century' collection, a celebration of some extraordinary achievements by African-American writers, dancers, painters, actors, musicians, and other influential artists of the 20th Century. |
Date | n.d. |
Description | Haki Madhubuti is an African-American author, educator and poet. In this interview Madhubuti reflects on the impact of literature on his life, and his involvement in the Black Arts Movement (BAM). He also discusses the life and work of African-American poets such as Gwendolyn Brooks. |
Document Type | Oral History (Video) |
Theme(s) | Arts and Culture |
Keywords | politics, arts, civil liberties, Harlem Renaissance, black power, poverty |
Places | Paris, France; Chicago, Illinois; Detroit, Michigan; |
People | Hughes, Langston; Wright, Richard; Baldwin, James; Brooks, Gwendolyn; Hurston, Zora Neale; Randall, Dudley |
Organisations/Associations | Black Arts Movement (BAM) |
Note | Please note that some of the metadata for this document has been drawn from the catalogue of Washington University in St. Louis. |
Name | Madhubuti, Haki |
Interviewer | Pollard, Sam; Greene, Denise |
Date of Recording | n.d. |
Duration | 01:29:54 |
Copyright | Copyright is owned by Washington University |