Abstract

Cultural and social historians of World War I have emphasized the central role that the experiences of African American troops overseas played in the changing definitions of African American manhood in the early twentieth century. As Adriane Lentz-Smith observes in Freedom Struggles: African Americans and World War I (2009), those experiences “altered how these soldiers saw themselves as citizens, workers, heroes, and lovers and transformed how they interpolated those identities into their worldview” (7). This process of reconstructing and reconceptualizing the black male citizen in the public and private spheres of American life resulted in various black masculinities rather than in a single construct. As Martin Summers emphasizes in Manliness and Its Discontents: The Black Middle Class and the Transformation of Masculinity, 1900-1930 (2004), the outcome was multiple and diverse because the gradual transformation in understanding black manhood was not only an act of resistance to white male supremacist understandings of manliness and manhood but also an active, multifaceted process of black male agency and self-assertion that took place both “across a range of relationships” within the African American community and in dialogue with the world beyond (13). Despite the important role World War I played in the early-twentieth-century refashioning of black American manhood, very few current African American novelists have attempted to offer retrospective renderings or interpretations of this war’s complex and tension-ridden significance in black male identity formation in the United States. In the 1920s and 1930s, the Great War was present in various ways in several African American literary works, and permanently traumatized veterans also make a memorable appearance in the Golden Day episode of Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man (1952). However, late-twentieth-century novels depicting the experiences of African American World War I soldiers or veterans are rare, the most notable exception being Toni Morrison’s Sula (1973), with its sensitively drawn portrait of Shadrack; nor has the Great Twenty-First-Century African American Novel about World War I yet been written. Focusing on the

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