Double Dozens: An Anthology of Poets from Sterling Brown to Kali (1966)
After Winter: Sterling Brown (1985) is a documentary by Haile Gerima about the famous Black poet, Sterling Brown.
His professors included Sterling Brown, Nathan Hare and Toni Morrison, a writer who later won the Nobel Prize.
One can still see the continued influence of Howard professors through Dasein's advisory board, which included Sterling Brown, Arthur Davis, Eugene Holmes and Owen Dodson.
He received his education from Alabama State College and then attended Howard University where he studied under Alain Locke, Sterling Brown and James A. Porter.
A Dedication: Sterling Brown.
After Winter: Sterling Brown (1985) is a documentary about the notable Black American poet.
As a freshman at Fresno State University, she discovered the work of Langston Hughes and Sterling Brown, who she claimed were her earliest influences.
"Today's cultural mulattoes echo those 'tragic mulattoes' critic Sterling Brown wrote about in the Thirties only when they too forget they are wholly black."
'The poems of Sterling Brown?'
Double Dozens: An Anthology of Poets from Sterling Brown to Kali (1966)
After Winter: Sterling Brown (1985) is a documentary by Haile Gerima about the famous Black poet, Sterling Brown.
His professors included Sterling Brown, Nathan Hare and Toni Morrison, a writer who later won the Nobel Prize.
One can still see the continued influence of Howard professors through Dasein's advisory board, which included Sterling Brown, Arthur Davis, Eugene Holmes and Owen Dodson.
He received his education from Alabama State College and then attended Howard University where he studied under Alain Locke, Sterling Brown and James A. Porter.
A Dedication: Sterling Brown.
After Winter: Sterling Brown (1985) is a documentary about the notable Black American poet.
As a freshman at Fresno State University, she discovered the work of Langston Hughes and Sterling Brown, who she claimed were her earliest influences.
"Today's cultural mulattoes echo those 'tragic mulattoes' critic Sterling Brown wrote about in the Thirties only when they too forget they are wholly black."
'The poems of Sterling Brown?'