'The Brownies' Book:' Inspiring Racial Pride in African-American Children offers a descriptive analysis and interpretation of America's first magazine for young African-Americans. Published by W.E.B. Du Bois in cooperation with Jessie Fauset and Augustus Granville Dill, the monthly hoped to foster a new African-American identity by (re)connecting «the children of the sun» with Africa, by turning them into proud Americans, and by educating them to be global citizens. The editors turned the crow into a positive symbol of blackness and provided photographs which proved that «black is beautiful» to increase the self-esteem of black youths. The magazine was a harbinger of the Harlem Renaissance and served as a creative outlet for many African-American writers and artists, among them many women.
«Revealing the ideological battles waged over the emerging category and genre of children's literature in the period from 1920 to 1960, Schäffer and Schmidt shed new light on important chapters in children's literature and culture.»
(Michaela Keck, Amerikastudien / American Studies 62.3 2017)
(Michaela Keck, Amerikastudien / American Studies 62.3 2017)