Bontemps, Arna (1902–1973), novelist, poet, and librarian. Born in Alexandria, Louisiana, the first child of a Roman Catholic bricklayer and a Methodist schoolteacher, Arna Wendell Bontemps grew up in California and graduated from Pacific Union College. After college he accepted a teaching position in Harlem at the height of the Harlem Renaissance, and in 1926 and 1927 won first prizes on three separate occasions in contests with other “New Negro” poets. The same years marked his marriage to Alberta Johnson and the start of a family of six children.
Bontemps's first effort at a novel (Chariot in the Cloud, 1929), a bildungsroman set in southern California, never found a publisher, but by mid-1931, as his teaching position in New York City ended, Harcourt accepted God Sends Sunday (1931), his novel about the rise and notoriety of Little Augie. This tiny black jockey of the 1890s, whose period of great luck went sour, was inspired by Bontemps's favorite uncle, Buddy.
While teaching at Oakwood Junior College, Bontemps began the first of several collaborations with Langston Hughes, Popo and Fifina: Children of Haiti (1932), a colorful travel book for juveniles that portrays two black children who migrate with their parents from an inland farm to a busy fishing village. The success of this new genre encouraged him to make juvenile fiction an ongoing part of his repertoire.
Residence in the Deep South proved fruitful for his career, for in quick succession he published his best-known short story, “A Summer Tragedy” (1932), the compelling narrative of a simple yet dignified couple worn weary by a lifetime of sharecropping on a southern plantation; wrote a dozen other tales of the South that were compiled years later under the title The Old South (1973); completed yet another profitable juvenile book, You Can't Pet a Possum (1934), for its time a charming rural Alabama story about an eight-year-old named Shine Boy and his yellow hound, Butch; initiated contact with composer and musician W. C. Handy to ghostwrite Handy's autobiography; and, in a visit to Fisk University in Nashville, “discovered” its rich and seemingly forgotten repository of narratives by former slaves.
Late in 1932 Bontemps started writing Black Thunder: Gabriel's Revolt: Virginia 1800 (1936), his singular and inspired representation of an actual slave insurrection that failed because of weather and treachery. This work establishes the concept of freedom as the principal motif of his ensuing works and evokes questions regarding differences between writing and orality as racial and cultural markers. But because he was forced out of Oakwood at the end of the 1934 school year, the novel was completed in the cramped space of his father's California home, where the family had retreated.
Ironic relief arrived a year later from the Adventists in the form of a principalship at their Shiloh Academy on Chicago's battered South Side. The venture was bright with promise because the city and the university had attracted a young and savvy coterie of social radicals including Richard Wright, Margaret Walker, and Jack Conroy. Favorable critical reception of Black Thunder assured Bontemps's celebrity among the group, and his application to the Julian Rosenwald Fund to research and write a third novel met with success. In Sad-Faced Boy (1937), he relates the travels to Harlem of three quaint Alabama boys who in time nostalgically discover the charm of their own birthplace. In 1938 he secured an appointment as editorial supervisor to the Federal Writers’ Project of the Illinois WPA. He sailed for the Caribbean in the fall of 1938 and put the finishing touches on Drums at Dusk (1939), his historical portrayal of the celebrated eighteenth-century black revolution on the island of Santo Domingo.
With great relief he completed Father of the Blues (1941), the “autobiography” commissioned by the ever-testy W. C. Handy; he edited his first compilation, Golden Slippers: An Anthology of Negro Poetry for Young Readers (1941); he then published a humorous American tall tale for children coauthored with his WPA colleague Jack Conroy titled The Fast Sooner Hound (1942); he was awarded two additional Rosenwald grants to pursue a degree and to write a book on “the Negro in Illinois”; and in 1943 he completed a master's degree in library science at the University of Chicago, clearing the way to his appointment as librarian at Fisk University.
In 1946 the controversial musical based on his first novel reached Broadway as St. Louis Woman for a short but successful run. Arguably his most distinguished work of the decade was The Story of the Negro (1948), a race history since Egyptian civilization that won him the Jane Addams Children's Book Award for 1956. Then, with Langston Hughes, he edited The Poetry of the Negro (1949), a comprehensive collection of poems by blacks and tributary poems by nonblacks.
An assortment of histories and biographies, largely written with youths in mind, emerged from Fisk throughout the 1950s and the succeeding civil rights years. Bontemps and Hughes's collaboration produced two anthologies during this period, The Book of Negro Folklore (1959) and American Negro Poetry (1963).
After Hughes's death in 1967, Bontemps compiled Hold Fast to Dreams (1969), a montage of poems by black and white writers. But compilations of a more personal sort rounded off his long career. They include The Harlem Renaissance Remembered (1972), featuring an introductory reflection by Bontemps and twelve critical essays on literary figures from the era; Personals (1963), a collection of his own poems reissued in 1973 as a third edition with a prefatory personal history; and The Old South: “A Summer Tragedy” and Other Stories of the Thirties (1973), which opens with the personal essay “Why I Returned”, places most of his short fiction under a single cover.
Retirement from Fisk in 1966 brought recognition in the form of two honorary degrees and distinguished professorial appointments at the University of Illinois (Chicago Circle), Yale University, and back at Fisk as writer in residence. Following his death in 1973, early estimates of his career from Sterling A. Brown and Aaron Douglas noted that he deserves to be known much better than he has been. Aptly, the Yale appointment included the title of Curator of the James Weldon Johnson Collection at the Beinecke Library, for prevalent views have come to regard him as a chronicler and keeper of black cultural heritage. It is worth noting that the vast and unique body of extant correspondence with his friend Langston Hughes is housed in this archive. Bontemps's most distinctive works are ringing affirmations of the human passion for freedom and the desire for social justice inherent in us all. Arnold Rampersad called him the conscience of his era and it could be fairly added that his tendency to fuse history and imagination represents his personal legacy to a collective memory.
Bibliography
Charles L. James
For more information on Arnaud Wendell Bontemps, visit Britannica.com.
Arna Bontemps (1902-1973) was an accomplished librarian, historian, editor, poet, critic, and novelist. His diverse occupations were unified by the common goal of forwarding a social and intellectual atmosphere in which African-American history, culture, and sense of self could flourish.
Bontemps was born on October 13, 1902 in Alexandria, Louisiana, to Creole parents, Marie Carolina Pembrooke and Paul Bismark Bontemps. His relationship with his father, a stonemason turned lay minister in the Seventh Day Adventist church, was complicated by his attachment to his mother, a former schoolteacher, who died when Bontemps was twelve. She had instilled in her son a love for the world of books and imagination stretching beyond his father's view that life consisted of practical concerns.
Several racially motivated incidents led the strong-willed Paul Bontemps to relocate his family to Los Angeles when Arna was three. He and the more exuberant Uncle Buddy, younger brother of the grandmother with whom Arna went to live in the California countryside, proved to be contradictory influences upon Arna after his mother's death. As the older of two children, Arna disappointed his father by choosing a life of writing over following four generations of Bontemps into the stonemason's trade. It was the warm, humorous Uncle Buddy who became for his great-nephew a resource for, as well as support of, the art of storytelling. While Paul Bontemps respected Uncle Buddy's ability to spell and read, he disapproved of his alcoholism, his association with the lower classes, and his fondness for minstrel shows, black dialect, preacher and ghost stories, signs, charms, and mumbo jumbo. Through Buddy, however, Arna Bontemps was able to embrace the black folk culture that would form the basis for much of his writing.
To counter what he perceived as the pernicious effects of Uncle Buddy's attitudes, the elder Bontemps sent his son to San Fernando Academy, a predominantly white boarding school, from 1917 to 1920, with the admonition, "Now don't go up there acting colored." As Arna grew older, he found his parents' antipathy to their own blackness echoed by educators and intellectuals sympathetic to the philosophy of assimilationism. He later pronounced such views efforts to "miseducate" him. He began to understand the opposing responses of his great-uncle and his father toward their racial roots as symbolizing the conflict facing American blacks to "embrac[e] the riches of the folk heritage" or to make a clean break with the past and all that it signified. He concluded that American education reduced the Negro experience to "two short paragraphs: a statement about jungle people in Africa and an equally brief account of the slavery issue in American history." He would devote his life to reinstating the omissions.
Bontemps's diverse occupations were unified by the common goal of forwarding a social and intellectual atmosphere in which African-American history, culture, and sense of self could flourish. Having graduated from Pacific Union College in 1923, he moved from California to New York City to teach at the Harlem Academy and to write. Bontemps became fast friends with Langston Hughes, a physical lookalike as well as an intellectual twin, evidenced by Hughes's 1926 manifesto on black art which became Bontemps's as well: "We younger Negro artists who create now intend to express our individual dark skinned selves without fear or shame."
First Poem Was Published
In the summer of 1924, at age twenty-one, Bontemps published a poem, "Hope," in Crisis, a journal instrumental in advancing the careers of most of the young writers associated with the Harlem Renaissance. Recognition thereafter came quickly with his poems "Golgotha Is a Mountain" and "The Return," which in 1926 and 1927, respectively, won the Alexander Pushkin Award for Poetry offered by Opportunity: Journal of Negro Life, and "Nocturne at Bethesda," which in 1927 won a first prize for poetry from Crisis. Both the Opportunity pieces are atavistic poems connecting Bontemps to other Harlem Renaissance poets who express a longing for their roots in Africa. They synthesize racial consciousness and personal emotion, rendering the theme of alienation central to so much of Renaissance poetry. They also suggest through images of jungles, rain, and the throbbing of drums the attempt to return to original sources, to unleash racial memory by moving back to a more primitive, more sensuous time. Bontemps asserts the archetypal black consciousness as a suffering but indomitable self, a symbol of endurance. In "Nocturne for Bethesda," as in many other poems, he juxtaposes racial consciousness with the traditional Christianity of his youth, lamenting in this poem the inability of religious teachings to make the suffering of the black race meaningful; only through the power of racial memory can blacks find solace. But while the poet recognizes the sustenance gained from such a return in consciousness, he also acknowledges that only a moment of intense insight is possible before the vision fades in the harsh light of reality. Although his stay in Harlem spanned barely seven years, Bontemps interacted with a chorus of new voices who made the Harlem Renaissance a golden age of black art. In addition to Hughes, these included Jean Toomer, Claude McKay, James Weldon Johnson, Countee Cullen, and Zora Neale Hurston.
Teaching Assignment at Oakwood Junior College
Although Bontemps harbored plans of pursuing a Ph.D. in English, the Great Depression, family responsibilities, and the demands of his writing contracts with publishing houses stifled such hopes as well as the spirit of optimism that pervaded his early verse. Having married Alberta Johnson on August 26, 1926, Bontemps was now a family man already supporting two of the six children he would eventually father. Forced by economic necessity to leave the Harlem Academy in 1931, Bontemps taught at Oakwood Junior College, a black Seventh Day Adventist school in Huntsville, Alabama. His situation there mirrored the working conditions of much of his career: he was typically short on funds and rarely had a comfortable place to work. His persistence paid off, however, particularly when he turned to writing children's books in the belief that a younger audience was more receptive to the positive images of blacks he wished to instill. Over the next forty years he wrote and edited such books for children and adolescents as Popo and Fifina (1932), You Can't Pet a Possum (1934), We Have Tomorrow (1945), Frederick Douglass: Slave-Fighter-Freeman (1959) and its sequel Free at Last: The Life of Frederick Douglass (1971), and Young Booker: Booker T. Washington's Early Days (1972).
His first novel, God Sends Sunday, the story of the most successful black jockey in St. Louis, was published in 1931. Most critics were receptive to the book, and Bontemps himself liked the story well enough to collaborate with Countee Cullen to turn it into a play, St. Louis Woman (1939). It premiered in New York on March 30, 1946, and ran for 113 performances. Bontemps's efforts to alter the perception of blacks in American literature ultimately proved disadvantageous to his teaching career: the administration of Oakwood Junior College accused him of promoting subversive racial propaganda and allegedly ordered him to burn his books. He resigned in 1934 and took his family to California, much as his father had done years before.
Black Thunder
While "temporarily and uncomfortably quartered" with his father and stepmother, Bontemps produced Black Thunder, his best and most popular novel. Published in 1936, it offers a fictional version of an 1800 slave rebellion led by Gabriel Prosser. Rendering the theme of revolution through the device of the slave narrative, the novel has become one of the great historical novels in the American tradition.
In 1935 Bontemps accepted a teaching assignment at the Shiloh Academy in Chicago, resigning in 1937 to work for the Illinois Writer's Project. The Caribbean flavor of some of his writing may be traced to a study tour in the Caribbean subsidized by a Rosenwald Fellowship for creative writing received in 1938 and renewed in 1942. His third novel, Drums at Dusk, appeared in 1939; continuing his interest in slave history, it depicts the revolt of blacks in Haiti occurring simultaneously with the French Revolution.
Librarian at Fisk University
After receiving a master's degree in library science from the University of Chicago in 1943, Bontemps was appointed head librarian at Fisk University in Nashville, Tennessee, where he remained until 1965. During this period he received two Guggenheim Fellowships for creative writing (1949, 1954). Using his friendship with Hughes to establish at Fisk University Library a Langston Hughes collection, securing as well the papers of such Harlem Renaissance figures as Jean Toomer, James Weldon Johnson, and Countee Cullen, and establishing a collection to honor George Gershwin, Bontemps made the library an important resource for the study of African-American culture.
While his poetry, fiction, and histories have been widely recognized, perhaps Bontemps's most enduring contribution to African-American literary history lies in the scholarly anthologies he compiled and edited, alone or in collaboration with Hughes. They appeal primarily to high school and college undergraduate students. Golden Slippers (1941) is a collection of poems by black writers suitable for young readers. The Book of Negro Folklore (1958) is a collection of animal tales and rhymes, slave narratives, ghost stories, sermons, and folk songs as well as essays on folklore by Sterling Brown and Zora Neale Hurston. Hold Fast to Dreams: Poems Old and New (1969) is an anthology of poems blending, without chronological or biographical data, works by blacks and whites, English and American authors. Great Slave Narratives (1969); and The Harlem Renaissance Remembered (1972) are collections of eyewitness descriptions of the period accompanied by a memoir by Bontemps.
Bontemps's series of anthologies was capped with a collection of his own poetry in 1963. Personals, consisting of twenty-three poems of the 1920s, remains a moving record of a young black artist exercising his imagination for the first time amid Harlem's turbulent literary and social excitement; it also contains an introductory comment describing the goals of the writers of the period and Bontemps's 1940s reaction to the Harlem milieu of the 1920s. Appropriately titled, the collection reveals the personal wonder of a young man whose consciousness is expanding with the enormous possibilities of self-definition and self-acceptance through art while simultaneously acknowledging a brooding sense of homelessness. This expression of the black self makes Personals a mirror for the development of black American literature during the 1920s. Bontemps captured the significance of the poetry of the period to all black artists in his 1963 introduction to American Negro Poetry: "In the Harlem Renaissance of the twenties poetry led the way for the other arts. It touched off the awakening that brought novelists, painters, sculptors, dancers, dramatists, and scholars of many kinds to the notice of a nation that had nearly forgotten about the gifts of its Negro people."
In 1966 Bontemps renewed his ties with Chicago by teaching black studies at the University of Illinois at Chicago Circle. In 1969 he became curator of the James Weldon Johnson Memorial Collection at Yale University, an important repository of original materials from the Harlem Renaissance. By 1971 he was back at Fisk as writer in residence, working on an autobiography he would not live to complete. He died in Nashville of a heart attack on June 4, 1973.
Though his accomplishments as librarian, historian, editor, poet, critic, and novelist were stunning, Arna Bontemps was perhaps as overshadowed by Langston Hughes as Zora Neale Hurston was by Richard Wright. Epitomizing the quiet, understated endurance celebrated in his poems. Contributing in ways large and small to the perpetuation of what was a limited interest in African-American life and culture, Bontemps paved the way for subsequent scholars and writers to find easier access to research materials as well as public recognition. He takes his place as a pioneer who, as Arthur P. Davis asserts, "kept flowing that trickle of interest in Negro American literature - that trickle which is now a torrent."
Books
Baker, Houston A. Jr., Black Literature in America, 1971.
Bone, Robert A., The Negro Novel in America, 1958.
Brown, Sterling, The Negro in American Fiction, 1937.
Fleming, Robert E., James Weldon Johnson and Arna Wendell
Bontemps: A Reference Guide, 1978.
Gloster, Hugh M., Negro Voices in American Fiction, 1948.
Page, James A., Selected Black American Authors: An Illustrated Bio-Bibliography, 1977.
Turner, Darwin T., Black American Literature: Poetry, 1969.
Whitlow, Roger, Black American Literature: A Critical History, 1973.
Young, James D., Black Writers in the Thirties, 1973.
Periodicals
American Libraries, December 1974.
From the Dark Tower: Afro-American Writers, 1900-1960, 1974. New York Times, June 6, 1973.
novelist; poet; editor; educator; librarian
Personal Information
Born Arnaud Wendell Bontemps, October 13, 1902, in Alexandria, LA; died of a heart attack, June 4, 1973, in Nashville, TN; son of Paul Bismark (a brick mason, jazz musician, and minister) and Maria Caroline (a teacher; maiden name, Pembrooke) Bontemps; married Alberta Johnson, August 26, 1926; children: Joan Marie Bontemps Williams, Paul Bismark, Poppy Alberta Bontemps Booker, Camille Ruby Bontemps Graves, Constance Rebecca Bontemps Thomas, Arna Alexander.
Education: Pacific Union College, A.B., 1923; University of Chicago Graduate School of Library Science, M.L.S., 1943.
Memberships: National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), PEN, American Library Association, Dramatists Guild, Metropolitan Nashville Board of Education, Sigma Pi Phi, Omega Psi Phi.
Career
Harlem Academy, New York City, teacher, 1924-31; Oakwood Junior College, Huntsville, AL, teacher, 1931-34; Shiloh Academy, Chicago, IL, teacher, 1935-38; served on Federal Writer's Project, W.P.A., Chicago, 1938-42; Fisk University, Nashville, TN, professor and head librarian, 1943-64, writer-in-residence, 1970-73; University of Illinois at Chicago Circle, professor, 1966-69; Yale University, New Haven, CT, visiting professor and curator of James Weldon Johnson Collection, 1969.
Life's Work
In 1933, while researching for what has since become his most renowned novel, Black Thunder, Arna Bontemps was given an ultimatum by his employer, the head of the Huntsville, Alabama, Seventh-Day Adventist school. The headmaster demanded publicly that Bontemps burn most of the books in his small personal library if he wished to continue teaching there. Burning works by Frederick Douglass, W. E. B. DuBois, and Claude McKay, the headmaster believed, would prove to the world that Bontemps had no connection to the widespread protests surrounding the nearby Scottsboro trials, in which five young black men were falsely accused and later convicted of raping two young white women.
While he had no connections to the unrest surrounding the trial of the "Scottsboro Boys," as they became known, Bontemps had raised suspicions by meeting with his close friends, the poet Langston Hughes and the writer Countee Cullen, and by ordering numerous books central to African-American history and life through the mail. Refusing to repudiate black claims to equal justice in the South, Bontemps did not burn his books; instead, he resigned at the end of the term and moved to Los Angeles, where he wrote his novel of black revolt, Black Thunder.
In a 1991 essay in Studies in American Fiction, literary critic Daniel Reagan described three lessons that he believed Bontemps learned from the ultimatum and which, subsequently, shaped his book, Black Thunder. Reagan noted: "First, he learned that books like [those written by Douglass, DuBois, and McKay] were considered dangerous in the hands of black Americans because they asserted an independent black voice and identity. Second, he learned that, for the African American of the 1930s, reading and writing were considered subversive activities. Finally, he encountered directly the power of society to eradicate voices from history."
Bontemps labored in writing Black Thunder and throughout his life to assert an independent black voice and identity in opposition to the negating effects of white racism. He began writing poetry during the Harlem Renaissance, the period in the 1920s when African-American writers centered in Harlem first broke into major mainstream publishers. Bontemps turned next to historical novels, rewriting dominant conceptions of history to include African-American voices. Later, he pioneered the reversal of racist stereotypes in children's stories by writing a number of children's books. In the course of his life, he also wrote successfully in a number of other genres, including drama, literary criticism, history, and biography, while editing a number of anthologies to make available the works of other black writers.
In addition to his writing, Bontemps worked for decades as a teacher and librarian, building the Fisk University library, in the words of his biographer, Kirkland C. Jones, into "one of the best in the South." Throughout his career, he received a number of awards and fellowships but it was not until the 1980s and early 1990s that Bontemps received scholarly recognition as a pioneering African-American author with apparent influences on a number of subsequent writers.
Arna Bontemps spent the first three years of his life in Alexandria, Louisiana, where he developed close emotional ties to the state and to Southern black culture. Born in 1902, into a relatively comfortable Creole family, Bontemps began his life immersed in a thriving culture. His father, Paul Bontemps, worked in building construction as a skilled brick and stone mason but was also an accomplished jazz trombonist, blowing his horn in a band during slow periods at work. One of his father's older brothers lived in New Orleans and had a daughter who married the prominent New Orleans jazz player, Kid Ory. Though Bontemps remembered few details of his early life in the South, the pace and the mood of Southern life remained with him, and stood in opposition to the faster pace of Los Angeles, where the family moved.
In Los Angeles, Bontemps felt pressure from his father to set aside Louisiana and to assimilate into the white mainstream. While his father held ambivalent feelings toward Louisiana, fluctuating between nostalgia and the estimation of it as a disadvantage in Los Angeles, he was glad, for his children's sake, that he had moved to a different environment. In an act of subtle protest against an indignity imposed on him by his native church during Arna's baptism, Paul Bontemps dropped his Catholicism and eventually became an Adventist minister. In an effort to restrict him from the influences of a grand-uncle from Louisiana who once possessed exquisite charm and grace but had since fallen into alcoholism, Paul sent the young Arna to a white boarding school and then on to a Seventh-Day Adventist college.
Though not a model of the upwardly-mobile life, "Uncle Buddy," as the dissolute grand-uncle Joe Ward was called, was still a rich source of traditional black folk material--and sweets from Louisiana--who endeared himself to the young Bontemps. Bontemps wrote in The Old South: "Buddy was still crazy about the minstrel shows and minstrel talk that had been the joy of his young manhood. He loved dialect stories, preacher stories, ghost stories, slave and master stories. He half believed in signs and charms and mumbo jumbo, and he believed wholeheartedly in ghosts." While not the only older relative available for Bontemps to learn from--he also had a pair of doting grandparents who showered him with love--the young Bontemps had grown fascinated with his grand-uncle.
The conflict between his father and Uncle Buddy schooled Bontemps in the contradictory attitudes blacks held toward their Southern heritage, as Bontemps revealed in The Old South. "In their opposing attitudes toward roots, my father and my great-uncle made me aware of a conflict in which every educated American Negro, and some who are not educated, must somehow take sides. By implication at least, one group advocates embracing the richness of the folk heritage; their opposites demand a clean break with the past and all it represents." While Bontemps would follow his father's advice in school, Bontemps modelled the main character of his first novel, God Sends Sunday , published in 1931, on his grand-uncle. In his subsequent novels, Bontemps would explore and articulate the epic heroism of his African-American heritage, as well.
Soon after graduating with an A.B. degree from Pacific Union College in May of 1923, Bontemps became enchanted with Harlem and moved from Los Angeles to New York. In his last volume of poetry, Personals, Bontemps wrote: "In some places, the autumn of 1924 may have been an unremarkable season. In Harlem it was like a foretaste of paradise.... What a city! What a world! And what a year for a colored boy to be leaving home for the first time! Full of golden hopes and romantic dreams, I had come all the way from Los Angeles ... to hear the music of my taste, to see serious plays, and God willing, to become a writer."
Becoming a writer was exactly what Bontemps did. With an appointment at Harlem Academy, the largest high school of the Seventh-Day Adventist denomination, Bontemps busied himself in his off-time by writing poems and working on a novel. After a short time, he had published more than one dozen poems in literary magazines, winning the poetry prize from Crisis magazine in 1926, and the Alexander Pushkin poetry prizes in 1926 and 1927.
A publisher expressed interest in publishing his poems as an anthology with the addition of some 20 more, but Bontemps had grown immersed in writing his first novel, Chariot in the Sky. Chariot remained unpublished but led to the 1931 publication of Bontemps's next novel, God Sends Sunday. Centered on Little Augie, a character based on Bontemps's grand-uncle, God Sends Sunday was set in New Orleans, St. Louis, and "Mudtown," a black rural neighborhood at the edge of Watts in Los Angeles. Bontemps was well on his way to exploring the form of the novel.
In Harlem, Bontemps enjoyed the community of black authors and intellectuals, made lasting friendships with many, and met and married his wife, Alberta Johnson. The couple had their first child in 1927. In November of 1924, Bontemps met the poet Langston Hughes, and with him, began a life-long friendship and correspondence that yielded a number of artistic collaborations as well as about 2,300 letters; nearly 500 were selected and published in 1980, by Charles H. Nichols in the volume, Arna Bontemps-Langston Hughes Letters: 1925-1967.
Bontemps also developed lasting friendships with fellow writers Countee Cullen, Claude McKay, and Rudolph Fisher, while attending parties attended by W.E.B. DuBois, James Weldon Johnson, Alain Locke, and Gwendolyn Bennett, among others. Bontemps analyzed the Harlem Renaissance from a more objective perspective in his 1972 volume, The Harlem Renaissance Remembered.
By 1932, the Great Depression had finally ended the Harlem Renaissance and scattered its authors across the nation in search of financial sustenance. In the early thirties, Bontemps moved to Huntsville, Alabama, where he taught at another Seventh-Day Adventist high school and researched his next novel, Black Thunder. He crafted Black Thunder from his father's house in California.
In Black Thunder, Bontemps portrays the Virginian slave revolt led by Gabriel Prosser in 1800. In a 1936 review of Black Thunder, author Richard Wright considered it "the only novel dealing forthrightly with the historical and revolutionary traditions of the Negro people." Not until the 1980s, however, did Black Thunder begin to be recognized by critics as a pioneering work of historical fiction that influenced a number of later writers.
In 1992, critic Eric J. Sundquist analyzed the complex interaction of a diversity of voices and perspectives in the novel. That year, Princeton University critic Arnold Rampersad appreciated Bontemps's pioneering achievement in having written "perhaps the first novel by a black American to be based on an actual American slave revolt or a conspiracy to revolt." Yet another perspective, as issued by critics Hazel V. Carby and Albert E. Stone, traced Bontemps's influence on a number of later writers, including historical novelists David Bradley and Sherley Anne Williams.
Interestingly, Black Thunder was not as well received by readers in its time. While it was reprinted four times during the late 1960s and again in the early 1990s, the novel failed to earn more than the publisher's advance during its original run in 1936. Bontemps would write one more adult novel, Drums at Dusk, published in 1939, but then turned away from the form in frustration. "I was in no mood merely to write entertaining novels," Bontemps told John O'Brien in an interview published in 1973. "The fact that Gone With the Wind was so popular at the time was a dramatic truth to me of what the country was willing to read. And I felt that black children had nothing with which they could identify. As a result I tried my hand at writing for children and with immediately better results."
From 1932 until his death in 1973, Bontemps published numerous novels, biographies, histories, and anthologies for children. His first, entitled Popo and Fifina: Children of Haiti, was a collaboration with Langston Hughes and met with phenomenal popular success. In arguing that Bontemps's children's literature should be anthologized, critic Violet J. Harris noted in Lion and the Unicorn that many of his children's books are still in circulation, and that some have remained in publication continuously. "Bontemps almost singlehandedly created a 'canon' of children's literature that focused, primarily, on the African-American experience," Harris assessed.
In the last four decades of his life, Bontemps wrote in a variety of other genres. In 1934, he collaborated with the poet Countee Cullen to adapt his novel God Sends Sunday for the stage. The two collaborated again more than ten years later to create another stage adaptation of the novel, this one entitled St. Louis Woman. St. Louis Woman opened on Broadway in 1946, the year of Cullen's death, to mixed reviews and a disappointing run, but enjoyed a successful tour later in the year. In 1952, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer bought the movie rights to the play for $75,000.
Meanwhile, starting in 1946, Bontemps had begun writing scholarly articles on the Harlem Renaissance. Over the next two decades, he would continue to write and speak widely on this subject. Finally, he edited a number of anthologies, including a collaboration with Langston Hughes entitled American Negro Poetry, published in 1963.
While writing in these various genres over the decades, Bontemps worked at several jobs. As soon as he received the publisher's advance for Black Thunder, he moved to Chicago, where he taught at another Seventh-Day Adventist school. Soon, the Seventh-day Adventists once again condemned his literary activities. Bontemps finally cut his ties with the schools in 1938. From there, he served on the Federal Writer's Project with the Franklin D. Roosevelt's Works Progress Administration (WPA) and wrote on fellowships into the 1940s.
In 1935, Bontemps enrolled in the Graduate School of the University of Chicago in pursuit of a Ph.D. in English but stopped just before the preliminary exams. He matriculated in the Graduate School of Library Science in 1942, and completed the M.L.S. degree the following year. That same year, Bontemps accepted the offer for the position of head librarian and full professor at Fisk University, in Nashville, Tennessee. From the mid-1960s until his death in 1973, Bontemps taught African-American literature at a number of universities, including Yale University and the University of Illinois's Chicago Circle campus, as well as Fisk.
Bontemps' biographer, Kirkland C. Jones, described him in summation as a dedicated, devoted man. Jones wrote: "This pioneer African-American literary personality remained faithful also in his friendships and was a devoted family man. Above all, he was a champion of freedom and dignity for everyone."
Awards
Poetry prize, Crisis magazine, 1926; Alexander Pushkin poetry prizes, 1926, 1927; short story prize, Opportunity magazine, 1932; Julius Rosenwald Fellowships, 1938-39, 1942-43; Guggenheim Fellowships, 1949-50, 1954-55; Jane Addams Children's Book Award for Story of the Negro, 1956; James L. Dow Award, Society of Midland Authors, for Anyplace but Here, 1967; honorary consultant in American Cultural History, Library of Congress, 1972; honorary L.H.D., Morgan State University, 1969, and Berea College, 1973.
Works
Writings
Further Reading
Books
— Nicholas Patti
| 1931 | God Sends Sunday. Bontemps's first novel tells the story of a black jockey whose luck deserts him. The author would collaborate with Countee Cullen on a dramatic adaptation, St. Louis Woman (1946). |
| 1936 | Black Thunder. Concerning the aborted 1800 slave revolt led by Gabriel Prosser in Virginia, Bontemps's book has been called one of the best African American novels ever written. |
| 1939 | Drums at Dusk. The author's final novel concerns the slave revolt in Haiti and the leadership of Toussaint L'Ouverture. |
| 1946 | St. Louis Woman. A musical version of Bontemps's first novel, God Sends Sunday (1931), opens on Broadway with an all-black cast. |
| 1948 | The Story of the Negro. A chronicle of black history from 1700 b.c. to the present, written for children. |
Arnaud "Arna" Wendell Bontemps (October 13, 1902 – June 4, 1973)[1] was an American poet and a noted member of the Harlem Renaissance.
|
Contents
|
Bontemps was born in the city of Alexandria, Louisiana on October 13, 1902 to the son of Charlie Bontemps and Marie Pembrooke Bontemps. His birthplace at 1327 Third Street has been recently restored and converted for use as the Bontemps African American Museum. It is included on the Louisiana African American Heritage Trail. He died of a heart attack on June 4, 1973 in Nashville,NC.
When he was three, his family moved to the Watts district of Los Angeles, California in the Great Migration of blacks out of the South to cities of the North, Midwest and West. He graduated from Pacific Union College in California in 1923. After graduation he went to New York to teach at Harlem Academy. In New York he became an important contributor to the Harlem Renaissance where he met many lifelong friends including Countee Cullen and Langston Hughes. Hughes became a role model, collaborator, and dear friend to Bontemps.[2]
He began writing while a student at Pacific Union College where he majored in English and minored in history, and later became the author of many children's books. His critically most important work, The Story of the Negro (1948), received the Jane Addams Book Award and was also a Newbery Honor Book. He is probably best known for the 1931 novel God Sends Sunday, the 1936 novel Black Thunder, and the 1966 anthology Great Slave Narratives. He also wrote the 1946 play St. Louis Woman with Countee Cullen.
In 1943, after graduating from the University of Chicago with a masters degree in library science, Bontemps was appointed head librarian at Fisk University in Nashville, TN. He held that position for 22 years and developed important collections and archives of African-American literature and culture, namely the Langston Hughes Renaissance Collection. He had two children. After retiring from the Fisk University in 1966, he worked at the University of Illinois (Chicago Circle) and Yale University, where he served as curator to the James Weldon Johnson Collection.[3] Through his librarianship and bibliographic work, Bontemps has become a leading figure in establishing African-American literature as a legitimate object of study and preservation.[4]
Bontemps died June 4, 1973, in Nashville, from a myocardial infarction (heart attack), while working on his autobiography. In 2002, scholar Molefi Kete Asante listed Arna Bontemps on his list of 100 Greatest African Americans.[5] Bontemps was a member of Omega Psi Phi fraternity.
(Unless noted otherwise, Bontemps is the main author of the work)
| Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Arna Bontemps |
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)