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When he died at just thirty-three years of age, Paul Laurence Dunbar had achieved more than any African American poet before him. Alice Dunbar Nelson, his wife, carried on his legacy through her poems, plays, and fierce commitment to social justice. Mr. and Mrs. Dunbar: Poems, Plays and Prose is a portrait of a couple, their talent, and their legacy.

Produktbeschreibung
When he died at just thirty-three years of age, Paul Laurence Dunbar had achieved more than any African American poet before him. Alice Dunbar Nelson, his wife, carried on his legacy through her poems, plays, and fierce commitment to social justice. Mr. and Mrs. Dunbar: Poems, Plays and Prose is a portrait of a couple, their talent, and their legacy.
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Autorenporträt
Paul Laurence Dunbar (1872-1906) was an African American poet, novelist, and playwright. Born in Dayton, Ohio, Dunbar was the son of parents who were emancipated from slavery in Kentucky during the American Civil War. He began writing stories and poems as a young boy, eventually publishing some in a local newspaper at the age of sixteen. In 1890, Dunbar worked as a writer and editor for The Tattler, Dayton's first weekly newspaper for African Americans, which was a joint project undertaken with the help of Dunbar's friends Wilbur and Orville Wright. The following year, after completing school, he struggled to make ends meet with a job as an elevator operator and envisioned for himself a career as a professional writer. In 1893, he published Oak and Ivy, a debut collection of poetry blending traditional verse and poems written in dialect. In 1896, a positive review of his collection Majors and Minors from noted critic William Dean Howells established Dunbar's reputation as a rising star in American literature. Over the next decade, Dunbar wrote ten more books of poetry, four collections of short stories, four novels, a musical, and a play. In his brief career, Dunbar became a respected advocate for civil rights, participating in meetings and helping to found the American Negro Academy. His lyrics for In Dahomey (1903) formed the centerpiece to the first musical written and performed by African Americans on Broadway, and many of his essays and poems appeared in the nation's leading publications, including Harper's Weekly and the Saturday Evening Post. Diagnosed with tuberculosis in 1900, however, Dunbar's health steadily declined in his final years, leading to his death at the age of thirty-three while at the height of his career.