Cane

Jean Toomer

Book cover for Cane
Book cover for Cane

Description

Originally published in 1923, Cane is Jean Toomer's literary masterpiece and an illumination of the psychological and moral concerns of the 1920s. An innovative, impressionistic blend of prose and poetry, it portrays the African American experience in the early twentieth century, which saw the end of the agriculture system, black Southern folk culture, and the migration of thousands from the rural South to the industrialized urban North. Against these backdrops, men and women struggle with emotions, desires, social strictures, bigotry, inadequacy, and inaction. A rich, heady montage -- inspired partly by Sherwood Anderson's Winesburg, Ohio -- Cane also has echoes of the Imagists, of Expressionism, and of jazz and drama.

About the Author

A native of Washington, D.C., Jean Toomer (1894-1967) took a four-month teaching job in Georgia in 1921. Here the poet, playwright, and novelist reconnected with his African-American roots to create his best-known work, Cane, a book of prose poetry inspired by the people and landscapes of the Deep South.

Publishing Information

Publisher: Dover Publications
Pub date: 2019-01-16
Length: 144 pages

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