The Promise of Language: A Memoir
Recounting a life—and language—by an esteemed scholar of African American rhetoric.

In this powerful coming-of-age memoir, author, scholar, and linguist Keith Gilyard presents a testament to the transformative power of language. From his earliest days in the segregated New York City public schools of the 1950s and '60s through his ascent in academia, the rhythm of Black America's vernacular and music provides the backdrop to Gilyard's intellectual awakening. He absorbed language through music, television, and radio, recognizing early on that his mother was a "language chameleon," a woman from Georgia who never sounded Black southern. His journey intertwines personal growth with the multiplicity of language and the sociopolitical upheavals of the Cold War era and the Civil Rights, Black Power, and Black Arts movements. Through vibrant anecdotes and introspection, Gilyard brings his experiences and realizations to life from memories of barbershops, churches, and schools, to lessons from mentors and influencers like Ed Bullins, Sonia Sanchez, Don L. Lee (later Haki Madhubuti), Toni Morrison, and Paule Marshall. Each encounter brings clarity and a new lens through which to understand the world, revealing how language shapes our lives and how our lives shape language.

1145940110
The Promise of Language: A Memoir
Recounting a life—and language—by an esteemed scholar of African American rhetoric.

In this powerful coming-of-age memoir, author, scholar, and linguist Keith Gilyard presents a testament to the transformative power of language. From his earliest days in the segregated New York City public schools of the 1950s and '60s through his ascent in academia, the rhythm of Black America's vernacular and music provides the backdrop to Gilyard's intellectual awakening. He absorbed language through music, television, and radio, recognizing early on that his mother was a "language chameleon," a woman from Georgia who never sounded Black southern. His journey intertwines personal growth with the multiplicity of language and the sociopolitical upheavals of the Cold War era and the Civil Rights, Black Power, and Black Arts movements. Through vibrant anecdotes and introspection, Gilyard brings his experiences and realizations to life from memories of barbershops, churches, and schools, to lessons from mentors and influencers like Ed Bullins, Sonia Sanchez, Don L. Lee (later Haki Madhubuti), Toni Morrison, and Paule Marshall. Each encounter brings clarity and a new lens through which to understand the world, revealing how language shapes our lives and how our lives shape language.

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The Promise of Language: A Memoir

The Promise of Language: A Memoir

The Promise of Language: A Memoir

The Promise of Language: A Memoir

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Overview

Recounting a life—and language—by an esteemed scholar of African American rhetoric.

In this powerful coming-of-age memoir, author, scholar, and linguist Keith Gilyard presents a testament to the transformative power of language. From his earliest days in the segregated New York City public schools of the 1950s and '60s through his ascent in academia, the rhythm of Black America's vernacular and music provides the backdrop to Gilyard's intellectual awakening. He absorbed language through music, television, and radio, recognizing early on that his mother was a "language chameleon," a woman from Georgia who never sounded Black southern. His journey intertwines personal growth with the multiplicity of language and the sociopolitical upheavals of the Cold War era and the Civil Rights, Black Power, and Black Arts movements. Through vibrant anecdotes and introspection, Gilyard brings his experiences and realizations to life from memories of barbershops, churches, and schools, to lessons from mentors and influencers like Ed Bullins, Sonia Sanchez, Don L. Lee (later Haki Madhubuti), Toni Morrison, and Paule Marshall. Each encounter brings clarity and a new lens through which to understand the world, revealing how language shapes our lives and how our lives shape language.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780814351956
Publisher: Wayne State University Press
Publication date: 01/14/2025
Series: African American Life
Sold by: Bookwire
Format: eBook
Pages: 176
File size: 845 KB

About the Author

Keith Gilyard is the Edwin Erle Sparks Professor of English and African American Studies at the Pennsylvania State University and president emeritus of the National Council of Teachers of English. He has published widely in topics of language and rhetoric, including Voices of the Self (Wayne State University Press). He is the recipient of two American Book Awards and the Penn State Faculty Scholar Medal for Outstanding Achievement in the Arts and Humanities.

What People are Saying About This

Johns Hopkins University - Lawrence Jackson

A hip collage that overlays the New York streets, the classroom, the library, and the record store—and is enlivened by radical politics and brushes with celebrities—Gilyard's tart autobiographical Künstlerroman brilliantly modernizes the chronicle of Black writers who came of age during the Civil Rights era and went on to create the Black Arts Movement.

author of Amiri Baraka and the Congress of African People - Michael Simanga

In The Promise of Language, poet, scholar, and essayist Keith Gilyard has dropped a major and critical contribution into the canon of African American experience, language, art, and culture. With honest and poetic storytelling, each page has a breathtaking urgency to the complex, dangerous, and beautiful growing up of a Black boy in the era of Civil Rights, Black Power, and the Black Arts Movement. If he were a painter, the first glance would take your breath away. If this were music, it'd be listened to over and over. It is all of that and poetic prose, written as honest and compelling as the blues, as emotional as soul, and as innovative and complex as jazz.

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