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Walking on Water: Black American Lives at the Turn of the Twenty-First Century-Fast Shipping

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SKU: 7835263303935 Category:

Description

Author/Contributor(s): Kenan, Randall
Publisher: Vintage
Date: 2/22/2000
Binding: Paperback
Condition: NEW

“A meaningful panoramic view of what it means to be for celebration.” —Times-Picayune

From the author of the National Book Critics Circle Award finalist
Let the Dead Bury Their Dead comes a moving, cliché-shattering group portrait of African Americans at the turn of the twenty-first century.

In a hypnotic blend of oral history and travel writing, Randall Kenan sets out to answer a question that has has long fascinated him: What does it mean to be black in America today? To find the answers, Kenan traveled America–from Alaska to Louisiana, from Maine to Las Vegas–over the course of six years, interviewing nearly two hundred African Americans from every conceivable walk of life. We meet a Republican congressman and an AIDS activist; a Baptist minister in Mormon Utah and an ambitious public-relations major in North Dakota; militant activists in Atlanta and movie folks in Los Angeles. The result is a marvellously sharp, full picture of contemporary African American lives and experiences.

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