Albert Murray was a bard of America’s racial complexity
In his essays and criticism, he insisted that black and white Americans shared a common culture
THE ORIGINAL sins of American race relations are as stark as they were horrific. For over two centuries, black people were enslaved. For decades afterwards they endured legal and de facto segregation, and, in the South—where Albert Murray grew up—forced labour and peonage imposed through convict-leasing and sharecropping. These brute facts bequeathed pain and injustice. But they also left a complex cultural legacy. Murray probed that complexity as deeply, seriously and joyously as any American writer.
This article appeared in the Culture section of the print edition under the headline “Twentieth-century fox”
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