Waverley Turner Carmichael

Waverley Turner Carmichael (1881 - 1936) was an African-American author. He was born in Snow Hill, Alabama. During the First World War he served with 92nd Infantry Division of the United States Army in France. After the war he worked as a clerk with the United States Postal Service in Boston.

A collection of his poetry was published as From the heart of a folk in 1918. His works are included in several anthologies of African-American verse. His verses were written in "Negro dialect".[1]

William James Edwards identifies him as an alumnus of Snow Hill Normal and Industrial Institute in his memoir Twenty-Five Years in the Black Belt.

A critic compared the young poet unfavorably to the level of refinement in Paul Laurence Dunbar's work.[2]

He studied with James Holly Hanford who wrote an introduction to Carmichael's book of verse.

Bibliography

  • From The Heart Of A Folk: A Book Of Songs: by Waverley Turner Carmichael, Cornhill Press (1918)
gollark: And possibly morally wrong, depending on your views on some things.
gollark: Deliberately giving up ultimate cosmic power is really stupid.
gollark: Because they know things like "the best way to achieve goal X is Y".
gollark: Also, for a broad enough definition of "everything about the world", they are already nigh-omnipotent.
gollark: It wouldn't really help anything at all.

References

  1. "The Bookman: A Literary Journal". Dodd, Mead and Company. January 28, 1918 via Google Books.
  2. Johnson, James Weldon (January 28, 1995). "The Selected Writings of James Weldon Johnson: The New York Age editorials (1914-1923)". Oxford University Press via Google Books.

Further reading

  • Wagner, Jean, Black Poets of the United States by Jean Wagner
  • Twenty Five Years in the Black Belt by William James Edwards


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