Sterling Stuckey is Professor of History and Religious Studies at the University of California, Riverside. He is also the author of Slave Culture (Oxford, 1987).
Stuckey skillfully explores the lives and/or cultural theory of significant personalities...to reveal crucial African cultural connections in the New World that are vital to African survival and transcendence. --Journal of American Ethnic History Sterling Stuckey's Going Through the Storm, even more than his great 1987 work, Slave Culture, provides a depth of understanding of the oneness of African American history and the arts: dance, song, poetry and music. There is a kind of poetry in his own expression of his ideas about the great thinkers in African American history. Melvilleans will be astonished at the knowledge that illuminates (review continues into next Sel Reviews field -- too many characters) Benito Cereno and at the insight Stuckey gives us into new aspects of the novella and of Melville's readings about Africa that light up much that is elusive or previously ignored in the work. Stuckey's two chapters on this masterpiece of American literature are a gift to Melville studies. Stuckey's emphasis in Going through the Storm is on African culture and its sources in Africa as well as in the New World but his concerns, like those of Paul Robeson whose evolving thought he studies in the final two chapters, are universal. --Joyce Sparer Adler, Professor, Emeritus, University of Guyana (or--author of War in Melville's Imagination) Plenty of history and culture of all Afro-American artistic endeavors is included in a study which will attract readers seeking to link Afro-American culture and history with artistic evolution. --Diane C. Donovan, The Midwest Book Review Stuckey skillfully explores the lives and/or cultural theory of significant personalities...to reveal crucial African cultural connections in the New World that are vital to African survival and transcendence. --Journal of American Ethnic History Sterling Stuckey's Going Through the Storm, even more than his great 1987 work, Slave Culture, provides a depth of understanding of the oneness of African American history and the arts: dance, song, poetry and music. There is a kind of poetry in his own expression of his ideas about the great thinkers in African American history. Melvilleans will be astonished at the knowledge that illuminates (review continues into next Sel Reviews field -- too many characters) Benito Cereno and at the insight Stuckey gives us into new aspects of the novella and of Melville's readings about Africa that light up much that is elusive or previously ignored in the work. Stuckey's two chapters on this masterpiece of American literature are a gift to Melville studies. Stuckey's emphasis in Going through the Storm is on African culture and its sources in Africa as well as in the New World but his concerns, like those of Paul Robeson whose evolving thought he studies in the final two chapters, are universal. --Joyce Sparer Adler, Professor, Emeritus, University of Guyana (or--author of War in Melville's Imagination) Plenty of history and culture of all Afro-American artistic endeavors is included in a study which will attract readers seeking to link Afro-American culture and history with artistic evolution. --Diane C. Donovan, The Midwest Book Review