
The Federation of
Friends of the DC Public Library System with the Friends of Libraries USA (FOLUSA), during
the American Library Association 1997 Mid-Winter Meeting in Washington, DC, have
designated The Founders Library at Howard University a Literary Landmark in
tribute to the life and writings of Sterling A. Brown. There are twenty-six FOLUSA
Literary Landmark designations scattered throughout the United States. This marks the
first time that the FOLUSA has designated a Literary Landmark in the nation's capital.
The ceremony was held on 14 February in the Browsing
Room of The Founders Library. It featured remarks by the presidents of the sponsoring
organizations, dramatic reading of Brown's poetry, and musical selections. The
participation of Howard University President, H. Patrick Swygert, along with other
University officers---Dr. Antoine Garibaldi, the University Provost and Chief Academic
Officer, and Interim Vice President for Academic Affairs, Mr. Harry G. Robinson III---gave
even greater meaning to the event. It demonstrated that Howard's libraries and research
centers are central to the University's teaching, research and service programs.
This webpage, a collaborative effort of The Founders
Library, the Moorland-Spingarn Research Center, and the English department at Howard
University, highlights the life and work of professor Sterling Brown. The Manuscripts
Division in the Moorland-Spingarn Research Center maintains the Sterling A. Brown Papers.
Selected Bibliography
INTRODUCTION
Sterling Allen Brown
(1901-1989), author, critic, professor, Poet Laureate for Washington, DC, and "the
Dean of American Poets," was born on Howard University's campus at the site where
Cook Hall Dormitory now stands. He was educated in the District of Columbia Public Schools
and received his Bachelor's degree from Williams College (Williamstown, MA) in 1922 with
honors as a Phi Beta Kappa. Brown entered graduate school and received his Master's degree
from Harvard University in 1923. He taught at Virginia Seminary in Lynchburg, Virginia;
Fisk University, Nashville, Tennessee; and Lincoln University in Missouri. He was a
visiting lecturer at Atlanta University, New York University and Vassar College. Sterling
Brown joined the Howard University faculty in 1929 and remained associated with Howard for
almost sixty years.
Professor Brown devoted his life to the development of
an authentic black folk literature. He was one of the first scholars to identify folklore
as a vital component of the black aesthetic and to recognize its validity as a form of
artistic expression. He worked to legitimatize this genre in several ways. As a critic,
Brown exposed the shortcomings of white literature that stereotyped blacks and
demonstrated why black authors are best suited to describe the Negro experience. As a
poet, he mined the rich vein of black Southern culture, replacing primitive or sentimental
caricatures with authentic folk heroes drawn from Afro-American sources. As a teacher,
Brown encouraged self-confidence among his students, urging them to find their own
literary voices and to educate themselves to be an audience worthy of receiving the
special gifts of black literature. Among his students were actor/playwright Ossie Davis,
political activist Stokley Carmichael, and the Nobel prize winning novelist, Toni
Morrison.
Overall, Brown's influence in the field of
Afro-American literature has been so great that scholar Darwin T. Turner told Ebony
Magazine: "I discovered that all trails led, at some point to Sterling Brown. His
Negro Caravan was the anthology of Afro-American. His unpublished study of
Afro-American theater was the major work in the field. His study of images of
Afro-Americans in American literature was a pioneer work. His essays on folk literature
and folklore were preeminent. He was not always the best critic
but Brown was the
literary historian who wrote the Bible for the study of Afro-American literature."
Brown's dedication to his field was unflinching, but it was not until he was in his late
sixties that the author received wide spread public acclaim. In 1968 the Black
Consciousness movement revived an interest in his work. ("Sterling Brown." Contemporary
Authors. CD-ROM. Detroit: Gale, 1996.)
During the 1970s, after years of neglect, Brown's
career took an upturn. In 1979 the City Council of the District of Columbia declared his
birthday, May 1, Sterling A. Brown Day. "I've been rediscovered,
reinstituted, regenerated and recovered," he said in a 1979 interview with The
Washington Post. He published The Collected Poems of Sterling Brown in 1980
which won the Lenore Marshall Prize in the early 1980s as the best book of poetry
published that year. In 1984 he was named Poet Laureate of the District of Columbia, a
position which, The Washington Post wrote, "[he had] held
informally for most of his 83 years."
In 1991, following a University-wide contest to name
the Howard University Libraries' Online Public Access Catalog (OPAC), the name "Sterling"
was selected to commemorate the unique contributions and far-reaching impact of
Sterling Allen Brown.
This selected bibliography is a compilation of some of
Professor Brown's well known works. It is intended to cover a broad perspective of his
writings. Call numbers are included for books located in The Founders Library and
Moorland-Spingarn Research Center (MSRC) at Howard University.
WORKS BY STERLING A. BROWN
POETRY
The Collected Poems of Sterling A. Brown. Ed. Michael S. Harper. New York:
Harper & Row, 1980. (Founders PS 3503 R833 R17/MSRC M811.5 B815c)
The Last Ride of Wild Bill and Eleven Narrative Poems. Detroit: Broadside
Press, 1975. (Founders PS 3503 R833 L3)
Southern Road. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Co., 1932. (MSRC M811.5 B815)
COLLECTED WORKS
"Athletics and the Arts." The Integration of the Negro in American
Society. Ed. E. Franklin Frazier. Washington, D.C: Howard University Press,
1951. 117-147. (MSRC H M378HM H83so)
"The Blues as Folk Poetry." Folk-Say: A Regional Miscellany. Ed.
Benjamin A. Botkin. Vol. 1. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1930. (MSRC M398 F71)
The Book of Negro Folklore. Ed. Arna Bontemps and Langston Hughes. New York:
Dodd Mead, 1958. (MRSC M398 H87B)
Negro Caravan: Writings by American Negroes. Ed. Arthur P. Davis and Ulysses
Lee. New York: Citadel Press, 1941, 1987. (Founders PS 508 N3 B75/MSRC 810.8 B81n2)
"Negro in the American Theatre." Oxford Companion to the Theatre. Ed.
Phyllis Hartnoll. New York: Oxford Press, 1951. 565-572.
"A Son's Return: 'Oh, Didn't He Ramble'." Chant of Saints: A
Gathering of Afro- American Literature, Art, and Scholarship. Ed. John Hope Franklin
and Michael S. Harper. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1979.
CRITICISM
"A Century of Negro Portraiture in American Literature." Massachusetts
Review 7.4 (1966): 63-96.
The Negro in American Fiction. Negro Poetry and Drama. New York: Arno Press,
1969. (Founders PS 153 N5 B678/ MSRC M810.9 B81a2)
Negro Poetry and Drama and the Negro in American Fiction. New York: Atheneum,
1969. (Founders PS 153 N5 B68)
"Negro Character as Seen by White Authors." Journal of Negro Education 2
(1933): 179-203.
"Negro Folk Expression: Spirituals, Seculars, Ballads, and Worksongs." Phylon
14. 4 (1953): 45-61.
"On Dialect Usage." The Slave's Narrative. Ed. Charles T. Davis and
Henry Louis Gates. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1985. 3-22.
"Our Literary Audience." Within the Circle: An Anthology of African
American Literary Criticism fromthe Harlem Renaissance to the Present. Ed. Angelyn
Mitchell. Durham: Duke University Press, 1994. 69-78.
Outline for the Study of the Poetry of American Negroes. New York: Harcourt,
Brace and Co., 1931.
"Seventy-Five Years of the Negro in Literature." Jackson Bulletin
2 (1953): 26-30.
WORKS ABOUT STERLING BROWN
BIOGRAPHY
Current Biography Yearbook 1989. New York: H.W. Wilson, 1990.
(Founders Ref. CT 100 C8)
Dictionary of Literary Biography 48, 51, 63. Detroit: Gale (Founders Ref.
PS 153 D542)
"Obituary." New York Times 17 Jan. 1989, early city ed.: B11.
"Obituary." Washington Post 16 Jan. 1989: B6.
"Sterling Allen Brown." Editorial. Washington Post 19 Jan. 1989: A26.
Trescott, Jacqueline. "Appreciation: Sterling Browns Enlightened
Example." Washington Post 16 Jan. 1989: D1+.
CRITICISM
Allen, Samuel. "Sterling Brown: Poems to Endure." Massachusetts
Review 24.3 (1983): 649-57.
Gabbin, Joanne V. Sterling Brown: Building the Black Aesthetic Tradition. Westport,
Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 1985. (Founders PS 3503 R833 Z66)
Smith, Gary. "The Literary Ballads of Sterling A. Brown." CLA Journal 33.4
(1989): 393-409.
Stepto, Robert. "Sterling Brown : Outsider in the Harlem Renaissance." The
Harlem Renaissance Revaluation. New York: Garland, 1989.
Tidwell, John Edgar. "Sterling A. Brown Tribute." Black American
Literature Forum 23.1 (1989): 89-112.
Wright, John S. "The New Poet and the Nachal Man: Sterling A. Brown's Folk
Odyssey." Black American Forum 23.1 (1989): 95-105.
FURTHER INFORMATION
AND SOURCES
Black Literature Criticism, Vol. 1; Black Writers; Contemporary
Authors 85-88; Contemporary Literary Criticism 1, 23, 26, 59.
Sterling Brown Papers. Manuscript Division, Moorland-Spingarn Research Center
(MSRC). Howard University.
Consult indexes and abstracts such as Abstracts of English Studies; Dissertation
Abstracts International, Humanities Index, and MLA International Bibliography to
locate additional information. Researched and Compiled by Imogene Zachery |