August Wilson Jitney

Throughout Jitney, August Wilson defines African American experience through the various use of generational characters while emphasizing the continued struggle of getting ahead in a white man’s world.
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Brantley, Ben. “Theater Review; Finding Drama in Life, and Vice Versa.” New York Times 26
Apr. 2000: 1. Regional Business News. Web. 5 Feb. 2012.
Ben Brantley writes,“A lot of advice gets handed out in the thoroughly engrossing new staging of August Wilson's ''Jitney,'' a play written two decades ago but never before seen in Manhattan. Some of that counsel, on subjects from how to treat a woman to how to get ahead in a white man's world, is sensible; some of it is crazy. But there's one bit of wisdom that you're especially glad the play's characters don't heed: ‘Don't put your business in the street’” (1).
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Dana A. Williams
“Contesting Black Male Responsibities in August Wilson’s Jitney.”
Completing the Twentieth-Century Cycle.
Ed. Alan Nadel
Univeristy of Iow Press, Iowa City
2010
30-40. Print.
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Kimmika L.H. Williams-Witherspoon
“Challenging the StereoTypes of Black Manhood: The Hidden Transcript in Jitney.”
Completing the Twentieth-Century Cycle.
Ed. Alan Nadel
Univeristy of Iow Press, Iowa City
2010
41-49. Print.
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David Krasner
“Jitney, Folklore and Responsibility”
The Cambridge Companion To August Wilson
Ed. Christopher Bigsby
Cambridge University Press
2007
158-168. Print.
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