The turn of the 21st century > August Wilson
The most accomplished of all African American dramatists in the last half of the 20th century, August Wilson, a high-school dropout and Black Power activist in the 1960s, opened his first major play, Ma Rainey's Black Bottom, on Broadway in 1984 with great critical and commercial success. The first of Wilson's 20th-century cycle, a series of plays designed to treat African American life in every decade of the past century, Ma Rainey's Black Bottom, which concerns blues musicians during the 1920s, was followed by Fences (produced 1985), which delineates a father-son conflict in a working-class family of the 1950s; Joe Turner's Come and Gone (produced 1986), about a displaced Southern black man's quest for his wife in 1911 Pittsburgh; The Piano Lesson (produced 1987), in which competing ideas about their legacy threatens to rupture an African American family in the 1930s; and Two Trains Running (produced 1990), a look at the Black Power ideals of the 1960s from the perspective of the late 1980s. Fences and The Piano Lesson both won the Pulitzer Prize. Wilson's later plays, Seven Guitars (produced 1995), Jitney! (produced in 1982 and revived in 1996), King Hedley II (produced 1999), and Gem of the Ocean (produced 2003), continued to excite the admiration of critics and viewers alike.
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·Introduction
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·Antebellum literature
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·The Civil War and Reconstruction
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·The late 19th and early 20th centuries
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·The Harlem Renaissance
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·The advent of urban realism
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·African American theatre
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·The literature of civil rights
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·Reconceptualizing Blackness
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·Renaissance in the 1970s
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·The turn of the 21st century
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·Additional Reading

