Nomadic Jamaican-American writer Claude McKay probably never dreamed that 21st-century readers would be delving into his private correspondence some 77 years after his death. But that’s probably part of the professional hazard (luck?) of being a literary luminary, or, as Yale University Press describes him, “one of the Harlem Renaissance’s brightest and most radical voices”.
Read the full story, “Books: A Peep Into Claude McKay’s “Letters in Exile””, on globalissues.org →
About The Author
You may also like
-
DIGITAL RIGHTS: ‘The Priority Should Be Holding Tech Companies Accountable, Not Banning Children from the Digital World’
-
Building Resilient Food Systems in an Age of Disruption
-
The GEF, Leads Global Drive to Tackle Shipping Threat to Oceans
-
Norway’s Funding Cutoff Is a Wake-Up Call for the Plastics Treaty Negotiations
-
What Hungary’s New Pro-Democracy Government Means For Rule of Law

