Jean Toomer Books
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GREAT BOOK ON TOOMER!!Review Date: 2007-04-28
We need more people like Jean Toomer today!Review Date: 1998-03-17
Toomer rejected racist ideology...Review Date: 1999-02-20
"And he had lived among blacks, among whites, among Jews, and in groups organized without racial labels around a shared interest such as literature or psychology, moving freely from any one of these groups to any other. One mark of membership in the 'colored' group, he said, was acceptance of the 'color line' with its attendant expectations; neither his family nor he had ever been so bound. To be in the white group would also imply the exclusion of the other."
It's a great book!

What About The Works of the writer.Review Date: 2007-11-05
This book is greatly recommened! Please add it to your library.
Toomer was NOT African American but European-AmericanReview Date: 1998-07-06

An Exploration of The WorkReview Date: 2006-11-18
This 90 page book illustrates Jean Toomer is far more powerful far than what is usually granted, by narrow racialists, to this author of "Cane". I believe Toomer is one of the the most important thinkers of the twentieth century.
Toomer's "Cane" was published in 1923, is considered by many to be the first literary work of the Harlem Renaissance. "Cane" was published before he met Gurdjieff. "Essentials" was published in 1931, seven years after he met Gurdjieff and while he was leading a group of people in Chicago who were attempting to practice the Gurdjieff's system of pyschological/philosphical method of living. "Essentials" had a very small run and was uninteresting to most of those people expecting a repeat "Cane." Here is a sample of some of Toomer's aphorisms: "Men are inclined either to work without hope, or hope without work. ... Social ills are caused by man's wish to have results greater than his efforts. "
This "Essentials: Jean Toomer" is an edited version of "Essentials" and has been re-published by Rudolph Byrd, a professor of African American Studies at Emory University. Nothing has been taken out of "Essentials"; however, something is added:
1. the former unpublished introduction, by Gorham Munson, written for the original.
2. a preface by Charles Johnson, African American author of National Book Award winning "Middle Passage"
Johnson says, "In American Literature, Toomer is unique -- a metaphysical pioneering genius, and this volume ['essentials'] of distilled reflections are indeed essential for the [twenty-first century]."
GOING AGAINST THE GRAINReview Date: 2000-11-28
After his success with Cane, Toomer disappeared from the literary scene to pursue his own philosophical and psychological inquiries. He went against the grain of his time which believed African-Americans were not capable of exploring the world of metaphysics, let alone psychology. Toomer, way ahead of his time proved them wrong as he sought enlightenment in the teachings of George Gurdjieff. During this time (1924-1935), Toomer published this slim volume offering his attempts to grapple with the experience of what it means to be human.
Essentials is a collection of Toomer's ponderings in his search for wholeness in a fragmented world. Drawing on modern psychology and eastern religious belief Toomer falls into the comapny of Emerson, Thoreau and Gibran as he deals with that which is transcendent. He revives the use of aphorisms to convey timeless truths in a world which is incable of moving beyond its limited definitions of life.
Long ignored, this work gives us a glimpse of Toomer's metaphysical side. Through it we capture another alternative view of dealing with reality. It is essential reading for anyone interested in metaphysics, African-American literature, Toomer and as an example of a Black writer who refused to be limited by definitions of race for his life. Think on his words. Grow in the wisdom shared by a great literary giant of the 20th century.

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This book marks new critical spaceReview Date: 1999-10-26
A must haveReview Date: 1999-10-11

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Toomer letters reveal the writer's complexitiesReview Date: 2006-08-31
Lewis Mumford, Alfred Steiglitz, Harte Crane, Countee Cullen, and Sherwood Anderson were among the notables of his era the leading Harlem Renaissance writer Jean Toomer corresponded with. Toomer's letters to these and others have meticulous notes by Whalen, a lecturer in American literature at the U. of Exeter; which notes give a pronounced biographical and critical dimension to the volume. Most of the letters are now at the Beinecke Library at Yale. They were written in the few years surrounding the publication of Toomer's book "Cane" which brought him into the spotlight. Not only this and other works, but also many of the letters try to come to grips with Toomer's complex racial make-up. In a letter to his publisher Horace Liveright, he writes, "My racial composition and my position in the world are realities which I alone may determine...Feature Negro if you wish, but do not expect me to feature it in advertisements for you...Whatever statements I give will inevitably come from a synthetic human and art point of view; not from a racial one." Such letters record Toomer's finely-tuned thoughts on social, political, and literary realities and issues in America at the time. The letters from the relatively short period associated with the completion and publication of Toomer's signature work "Cane" give a crystallized picture of the psychology, values, and aims of this author.

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A close analysis of Toomer's poetry, letters, and essaysReview Date: 2005-09-05

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Review-"Teaching Jean Toomer's 1923 Cane"Review Date: 2007-02-02
My understanding of Toomer was that he was a bit of a humanist - and I called the disembodied poems I had read in the various anthologies beautiful. I clearly did not understand how the metaphors in these poems related to the larger body of work in "Cane," or know how they reflected a complex view of the psychology of the Negro in 1920 America.
Thompson-Cager's analysis of "Cane" occurs on two levels. One gives the reader an in depth understanding of Toomer's social, intellectual, and spiritual development, which is juxtaposed alongside the history of the evolution of the African peoples in America. Her perspective is unique as she explores reasons behind this literary construction, which had previously eluded other critiques.
Thompson-Cager uses what is called "The Vertical Technique" in her analysis of "Cane". The text of Cane is explained using the following 4 stages of development; "The Incursion Cycle which depicts an attack on someone or something, The Atrophy Cycle Depicts the withering away of someone or something, The Destruction Cycle Depicts the annihilation or negative transformation of someone or something, and the rejuvenation Cycle Depicts the rebirth or the promise of a rebirth of someone or something." Thompson-Cager states that "The Vertical Technique puts all Africana people in the process of resolving a series of problems. Miraculously, Cane identifies and explores many of these problems still relevant in the twenty first century". (90) We could look at the people in Iraq over the past century, and use this same technique to write their multitude of stories.
Charts and diagrams demonstrate the function of the "vertical technique" and provide a roadmap to where each of the characters of Cane fit in the larger picture. The parallel information dealing with the history of the times which included issues around the inability of characters to realize artistic potential because of racial inequality, lack of women's rights, the implications of the Black migration, and the introduction of "legal" addictive narcotics into the culture, provides an excellent foundation for understanding the psychology of the culture as a whole.
After reading "Teaching Jean Toomer's 1923 Cane," I came away with a better understanding of the metaphors in "Cane." As I re-read "Cane", I fully admired how Toomer loved the work of manipulating language. I did not see the text as disjointed ramblings, but rather a complex series of interdependent portraits created in such a way that they would not cause too much discomfort in the status quo. The language of "Cane" so eloquently describes some of the most inhumane acts and through Thompson-Cager's analysis, the code is broken.
"Teaching Jean Toomer's 1923 CANE" is a challenging read, however like most challenges it has much to offer educators and writers. I highly recommend it to those who are interested in honing perspectives on the human condition and to those who want to try a different approach to the work of writing as witness.
There is a two disc companion CD that accompanies this work, "Teaching Jean Toomer's 1923 CANE, The Performance", Adapted and Directed by Chezia Thompson Cager. This is an archival recording of a 1978 performance of "Cane". Photographs of the production are included in the book "Teaching Jean Toomer's 1923 CANE." I found that hearing the voices and dialects of the characters was essential to fully experiencing the "blues motif" style of "Cane". The quality of the CD is reminiscent of listening to a 45 on the Victrola, so older listeners will experience a bit of nostalgia, while younger listeners may be somewhat impatient with the lo-tech, no frills, true to the period quality of the disc.
Linda Joy Burke
Poet and Writer

PerfectionReview Date: 2008-05-01
Wonderful readingReview Date: 2008-04-13
BeautifulReview Date: 2006-01-15
Difficult (2.5 stars)Review Date: 2007-03-10
Toomer was of mixed heritage, so the book is rife with ambivalence and a proverbial tug-of-war between "light and dark." It has been pointed out that Toomer was very much influenced by Picasso's cubism and worked to recreate this in his literature. As far as I know, Toomer and Gertrude Stein are the only two to have done this, and the effect is arrantly vertiginous in both cases.
In literary circles, this book is considered a must-read in African-American literature, and for that reason, it should be read and contemplated. However, if you are looking for leisure reading, I would suggest something else. The book is only 112 pages long, but I found that it somehow seemed rather "Victorian" in length. It is by no means fast.
In defense of the book, I think my problem with it is a result of preferring prose over poetry and drama. If you are a reader that likes all genres equally, you may find this considerably more enjoyable.
Suggested Af/Am Lit: Wright's Black Boy, Morrison's Song of Solomon, Ellison's Invisible Man, Chesnutt's The Marrow of Tradition, and Moody's Coming of Age in Mississippi.
Conflicted and LyricalReview Date: 2004-09-11
Another thread appears to me to be the striving for unity. This desire for unity is expressed in the ways in which the men and women in CANE strive toward unity in their relation-ships. Admittedly, they fail miserably. The women in the book are terribly one-sided--sex objects that are either passive, as with Karintha and Fern and Avey, or active, as with Carma and Louisa and Bona. However, for all their being available physically, the females Toomer portrays in his cameos are untouchable or out of reach spiritually. The men are also one-sided--rational and yet passionate, often overcome by lust and rage. These probably function to demonstrate Toomer's personal views on what men and women are, and how their desires for unity in healthy relation-ships produces a significant amount of pain as a result of their oppositeness.
Pain is yet another thread that unifies the poetry, sketches, stories and drama of CANE. After all is experienced, the pain is what is left, the only significant fruit of their struggles. In Part One, the pain everyone suffers seems to be symbolized by the ever-present cane. The cane, which can cut the skin, must be ground, the juice boiled and cooled, in order to obtain it sweetness. Is the pain which the characters savor the sweetness in their lives? And if so, wouldn't the cane also represent the sweetness (pain) in their lives? In Part Two, which takes place in the urban North, the Negroes live repressed, frustrated, and sadly warped lives. The pain is intellectualized, yet it is still there, doubly so. Is this a result of being separated from the soil--that which is perceived to be source of their spirituality--as well as their failure to form meaningful relationships? The pain in "Kabnis" is more incoherent, the pain of an urban negro who has returned to his roots only to find that he cannot accept them, is alienated by them.
It is impossible to discuss all of the tangled threads that weave CANE into the powerfully moving and unorthodox novel of Toomer's voyage of self-discovery. It is often incoherent, filled with evocative recurrent images, and powerful character sketches that leave the reader unfulfilled, confused, and hungry for more. Perhaps it is Toomer's own hunger, expressed in his writing, that the reader picks up. If there was more to the novel, perhaps one could pin down the more elusive points. Then again, perhaps not.

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Things are seldom what they appearReview Date: 2006-02-14
Great Book!Review Date: 2002-01-31
Tour-de-ForceReview Date: 2002-01-21
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Awesome!Review Date: 1999-10-11
Toomer was NOT "African American" but European-AmericanReview Date: 1998-07-06
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