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Claude Brown

 

Brown, Claude (b. 1937–2002), autobiographer, writer, and social commentator. Claude Brown was born in New York City on 23 February 1937 to Henry Lee and Ossie Brock Brown, South Carolinians who had come north in 1935 looking for economic opportunities unavailable in the South. Growing up in Harlem involved Claude Brown in crime and violence early in his life. By the time he was ten, he had joined the stealing division of a notorious street gang and had a history of truancy and expulsion from school. At eleven, Brown was sent to the Wiltwyck school for delinquent boys, where he came under the supervision of Dr. Ernest Papanek, whose positive influence in his life Brown would later acknowledge.

Back on the streets after two years at Wiltwyck, at age thirteen Brown was shot during an attempted robbery. A year later, he was sent to the Warwick school for boys, where he completed three terms before his final release in July 1953. From this point on, Brown gradually freed himself from the destructive street life of the Harlem ghetto. He began high school when he was sixteen and graduated in 1957. During these years, Brown held various odd jobs in New York and played jazz in Greenwich Village.

Claude Brown continued his education at Howard University, finishing a degree in government and business in 1965, the same year that Macmillan published his autobiography, Manchild in the Promised Land. The work originated from a piece Brown had written for Dissent magazine. Encouraged to expand the work into a full-length narrative, Brown produced a 1,537-page manuscript that became, after extensive editing, a hugely successful best-seller. Critics praised the vivid realism of Manchild and favorably compared Brown to James Baldwin, Ralph Ellison, and Richard Wright. Like them, Brown was hailed as a powerful, relentless chronicler of the brutal reality of African American life in northern urban cities. Additionally, Manchild in the Promised Land was held up as an American success story, the narrative of one who beat the odds of his childhood and saved his own life.

The publication of his autobiography made Claude Brown a new authoritative voice in the African American community. He published a second book, The Children of Ham, in 1976. Much less well received than Manchild, this book records the stories of thirteen Harlem residents, focusing on their struggles against poverty, crime, and drugs.

Brown has largely dropped from public view since the publication of his books, but his work reveals his continuing concern for the problems facing people in the inner city. For example, his 1987 documentary “Manchild Revisited: A Commentary by Claude Brown” addresses urban crime. In it, Brown supports capital punishment; voluntarism in black neighborhoods to fight crime; more prosecutors, judges, and prisons; and the decriminalization of drugs. Although nothing Brown has done since publishing Manchild in the Promised Land has created the sensation that book did, Brown remains a thoughtful, sometimes controversial commentator on African American social issues.

Bibliography

  • “Brown, Claude,” in CA, vols. 73–76, ed. Frances Carol Locher, 1978, pp. 88–189

David L. Dudley

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American Author: Claude Brown
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  • Born: February 23, 1937
  • Birthplace: New York, NY
  • Died: February 2, 2002

Claude Brown is best known for his autobiography about growing up in Harlem, NY, Manchild in the Promised Land. Having spent his life in and out of juvenile homes and detention centers, his life turned around when, at the age of 13, he was shot in the abdomen during a burglary. With the encouragement of a friend, he entered Howard University, and began writing about his life experiences.

Brown's second book, The Children of Ham, is about struggling young blacks growing up on Harlem. He has also published articles in Esquire, The Saturday Evening Post, Life, Look and The New York Times Magazine. An advocate of programs that mentor youth from Harlem, and help them go to college, Brown also supported a Newark-based program that brought youth caught up in the court system into an intensive eight-week residential treatment program in an effort to help them turn their lives around.

Most Famous Works

  • Manchild in the Promised Land (1965)
  • The Children of Ham (1976)
Black Biography: Claude Brown
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writer; lecturer

Personal Information

Born on February 23, 1937, in New York, NY; died of lung cancer on February 2, 2002, in New York, NY; son of Henry Lee (a railroadman) and Ossie (a domestic worker; maiden name, Brock) Brown; married Helen Jones (a telephone operator), 1961 (later separated); children: two
Education: Howard University, Washington, DC, BA 1965; further study of law at Stanford University and Rutgers University.
Religion: Investigated both the Black Muslim and the Coptic (East African) Christian faiths.

Career

Member of Harlem's Buccaneers gang, 1940s; drug dealer; worked as busboy, deliveryman, cosmetics salesman and jazz pianist, 1950s; writer and lecturer, 1965-02, works include: Manchild in the Promised Land, 1965; The Children of Ham, 1976.

Life's Work

Manchild in the Promised Land, author Claude Brown's 1965 memoir of growing up on the violent streets of New York City's Harlem neighborhood, was a crucial document in awakening the sensibilities of American readers to the conditions under which the urban African-American minority in their country often lived. Brown wrote of murderers, prostitutes, drug abusers, organized crime, and a dozen other ills of urban life, using a unique narrative voice that commanded sympathy and identification from readers even as they were shocked to learn of the conditions Brown described. In the decades following the book's publication it found its way more and more often into the school literature curricula, and by the century's end it was well on its way to being regarded as a bona fide American classic.

Brown was a New York City native, born on February 23, 1937, to Henry Lee Brown, a railroadman, and Ossie Brown, a domestic worker. His parents had moved to Harlem from South Carolina two years before his birth and he grew up living in a rundown apartment building on 146th Street. "I never was close to my father," Brown commented, according to the Washington Post. "He beat the hell out of me and that was it. He had too many problems, too many frustrations." By the time Brown was eight he had been thrown out of school, and soon he was living the gang member's life he would later write about. As a member of the Harlem Buccaneers, Brown became adept at street theft.

Attended School Founded by Eleanor Roosevelt

Constantly in trouble with the police, Brown was given several psychiatric examinations that did little to alter his destructive path. At age 11, he was admitted to the Wiltwyck School, a special-education institute in rural upstate New York's Ulster County. The school had been co-founded by former First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt, whom Brown met and to whom he later dedicated Manchild in the Promised Land. But the person who made the strongest impression on Brown was a school psychologist, Ernest Papanek, whom he described in the book as "probably the smartest and deepest cat I had ever met." Despite these positive influences, however, Brown ended up back on Harlem's streets.

"I was growing up now, and people were going to expect things from me. I would soon be expected to kill a nigger if he mistreated me, like Rock, Bubba Williams, and Dewdrop had," Brown wrote in Manchild in the Promised Land. "Nobody messed with them.... I knew now that I had to keep up with these cats; if I didn't, I would lose my respect in the neighborhood." But several events diverted Brown from the violent end this situation might have forecast. First, he was shot in the leg during a burglary at age 13. Shortly after, he tried heroin for the first time, and became extremely sick, limiting his activities on the street. Then during a stint in a New York reform school he was encouraged to read biographies of African Americans and others who had triumphed over tremendous odds. Finally, when police arrested a man who had cheated Brown in a street deal gone bad, Brown realized how close he had come to committing murder himself.

Brown finished high school by taking night classes and then worked for several years as a busboy, deliveryman, cosmetics salesman and occasional jazz pianist in New York's Greenwich Village. Searching for meaning and structure in his life, he investigated both the Black Muslim faith and Coptic (East African) Christianity. Dreaming of a career in law or politics, Brown enrolled at Howard University in Washington, D.C., and graduated in 1965. At first he had financial help from the Metropolitan Community Methodist Church, but it wasn't long before his gift for writing started to help pay the tuition bills.

Asked to Write Article About Harlem

Fame came in the form of a request from his former counselor Papanek to write an article about Harlem for Dissent magazine. That article was published, and Brown's direct, profane, and often funny style caught the attention of an editor at the giant Macmillan publishing house. From an early twenty-first-century perspective, with hip-hop lyrics and other raw descriptions of ghetto life prevalent in modern literature, it is perhaps difficult for modern readers to appreciate how new Brown's writing seemed at the time. It was far removed from the ambitious literary styles of such African-American writers as Ralph Ellison and Richard Wright. Brown was perhaps one of the forerunners of a realistic, autobiographical strain in black literature and music.

Macmillan offered Brown a $2,000 advance to write a book based on his experiences. Reading Wright's novels for inspiration, Brown plugged away at what became Manchild in the Promised Land, delivering a 1,500-page manuscript to Macmillan in a grocery carton two years later. By that time, Brown's original editor had moved on, and the manuscript languished unread for several more months. Manchild in the Promised Land was finally published in 1965 after a new editor, Alan Rinzler, discovered Brown's work and helped trim it to a manageable length. "He had an authentic voice--violent, funny and optimistic," Rinzler later told the New York Times.

Brown, for his part, was amazed at the attention he was receiving. "It's hard for me to perceive what is so exciting to people in this thing," he was quoted as saying in a Washington Post article. According to the Post, he did explain to a reporter that "I'm trying to show more than anything else the humanity of the Negro. Somebody has to stop problematizing and start humanizing the Negro." And indeed it was the human quality of Brown's memoir that set it apart from other similar books and made it a best seller over the long term. Though not billed as an autobiography, Brown's book presented a straightforward account of his own life and of the people he knew in Harlem. Manchild in the Promised Land went on to sell more than four million copies and was translated into 14 languages.

Took to Lecture Circuit

Like Ralph Ellison, Brown remains a writer identified overwhelmingly with a single creation. But he remained active as a writer for the rest of his life. In the late 1960s he attended law school at Stanford University and Rutgers University but finally shelved his political plans when his lecture-circuit earnings reached $60,000 a year. For many years Brown was in demand as a lecturer. He wrote magazine articles on Harlem and other subjects, but completed only one other full-length book, the novel The Children of Ham, in 1976. That book depicted a group of Harlem teenagers who try to escape a world even more dominated by drug abuse and crime than was the Harlem in which Brown grew up.

A keen observer of the devastation wrought by the crack cocaine epidemic of the late 1980s and early 1990s, Brown worked on but never completed a third book that compared his own experiences with those of children in modern Harlem. In later life Brown lived in Newark, New Jersey, but maintained strong connections to New York City. Married and divorced, he was survived by two children and one grandson when he died of lung cancer in New York on February 2, 2002. Manchild in the Promised Land, noted the New York Times, is still selling upwards of 30,000 copies a year.

Awards

Selected: Metropolitan Community Methodist Church grant, 1959; Saturday Review Ansfeld-Wolf Award, for furthering intergroup relations.

Works

Selected writings

  • Manchild in the Promised Land, Macmillan, 1965.
  • The Children of Ham, Stein & Day, 1976.

Further Reading

Periodicals

  • Boston Globe, February 7, 2002, p. B9.
  • Chronicle of Higher Education, April 12, 2002, p. 5.
  • Daily Telegraph (London, England), March 7, 2002, p. 31.
  • Jet, February 25, 2002, p. 55.
  • New York Times, February 6, 2002, p. B8.
  • Time, February 18, 2002, p. 27.
  • Washington Post, February 7, 2002, p. B7.
On-line
  • Contemporary Authors Online, http://www.galenet.com/servlet/BioRC.

— James M. Manheim

Works: Works by Claude Brown
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(1937-2002)

1965Manchild in the Promised Land. Brown achieves notoriety and acclaim for these autobiographical reflections of his youth in Harlem. Many consider it one of the groundbreaking works of the decade to portray inner-city black culture. Brown would follow it with The Children of Ham (1976), a short story sequence about Harlem residents coping with poverty, crime, and drugs.

Wikipedia: Claude Brown
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Claude Brown (February 23, 1937 - February 2, 2002) is the author of Manchild in the Promised Land, published to critical acclaim in 1965, which tells the story of his coming of age during the 1940s and 1950s in Harlem.

Autobiographical in nature, the book describes the cultural, economic, and religious conditions that suffused Harlem during Brown's early childhood and adolescence while constructing a narrative of Brown's tumultuous early life. starting at age six, his life involved stealing, alcohol consumption, truancy, and gang wars. These were the harsh realities of life in 1950s Harlem that shaped his childhood. At the age of 11, he was placed in a reform school, which he cycled in and out of more than three times.

By that time he had made the acquaintance of Dr. Ernest Papanek, a psychologist and the director of the Wiltwyck School for deprived and emotionally disturbed boys, which was in Ulster County, New York. Dr. Papanek, whom Mr. Brown described in his book as "probably the smartest and the deepest cat I had ever met," encouraged him to seek an education.

Acknowledging the damaging effects of drugs like heroin and gang violence on his community and his friends, he decided to change. He knew he had to get out of Harlem. He moved away from Harlem, his heart broken seeing all his friends "Strung-out" by drug addiction. He felt Harlem wasn't for him anymore. After being one of the "Hippest cats" (as he says in the book), he decided to turn away from it and move down to Greenwich Village where he could start over. For the first time in his life, he decided to get an education and eventually began attending night classes at a high school downtown, supporting himself by working as a busboy, deliveryman and at other odd jobs. Eventually, he went on to graduate in 1965 from Howard University (where his professors included sociologists E. Franklin Frazier and Nathan Hare), and later went on to attend Stanford and Rutgers law schools, but left when the lecture circuit proved more lucrative than law.

Brown would go on to publish a second book, Children Of Ham, which explores the lives of several black teenagers from Harlem who escape the clutches of heroin. By comparison to his first work, it was a failure.

Brown spent most of his professional life as a full-time lecturer, but also became increasingly involved in critical urban issues, especially with respect to at-risk black adolescents. This lifetime concern led him to become deeply involved in criminal justice and rehabilitation issues, as he visited juvenile detention centers and prisons in search of answers to the question of what was motivating the much more violent, feral behavior of youth gangs and underage criminals prowling America's inner-cities, a plague that seemingly became progressively worse with the passage of time. Essentially, Manchild in the Promised Land was written to demonstrate how someone could overcome great odds to become in his case, a lawyer.

His ultimate conclusion was that American society had abandoned these young individuals, causing a profound sense of alienation and ostracism, which in turn led to futile outbursts of excessive, wanton violence and criminality. He remained critical of what he perceived as the societal failures of addressing these existential crises afflicting African-American youth-especially those residing in urban areas-and more broadly, underserved, alienated American youth in general.

Claude Brown died of respiratory failure in 2002.

See also

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African American Literature. The Concise Oxford Companion to African American Literature. Copyright © 2001, 2002 by Oxford University Press, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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Black Biography. Contemporary Black Biography. Copyright © 2006 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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