Buch | Kapitel
Richard Wright's haiku, Japanese poetics, and classical chinese poetry
pp. 23-43
Abstrakt
Around two years before his death, Richard Wright, one of the most well-known African American writers in the twentieth century, became fascinated with haiku through his introduction to Sinclair Beiles, a young South African writer in Paris. Wright wrote more than four thousand haiku, of which 817 were collected in Haiku: This Other World, published posthumously in 1998. This collection is doubtlessly a significant addition to the Wright Studies.
Publication details
Published in:
Hakutani Yoshinobu (2011) Cross-cultural visions in African American literature: West meets East. Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.
Seiten: 23-43
Referenz:
Zheng Jianqing (2011) „Richard Wright's haiku, Japanese poetics, and classical chinese poetry“, In: Y. Hakutani (ed.), Cross-cultural visions in African American literature, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, 23–43.


