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Gates, Henry Louis, Jr.

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Gates, Henry Louis, Jr., 1950–, American scholar and critic, b. Keyser, W.Va., grad. Yale Univ. (B.A. 1973), Cambridge Univ. (Ph.D. 1979), where he studied with Wole Soyinka Soyinka, Wole (wō`lā shôyĭng`kə)
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. Gates is an expert on African-American literature and culture. His rediscovery and reinterpretation of historic black literature began in 1981 with his finding, authenticating, and publishing of the first known novel by an African American, Harriet E. Wilson's Our Nig (1859). Since then Gates has been instrumental in bringing other previously lost works to light. His many books of criticism include Figures in Black: Words, Signs, and the "Racial" Self (1987) and The Signifying Monkey: A Theory of African-American Literary Criticism (1988), in which he develops the notion of "signifyin(g)," a linguistic tradition running throughout black culture that describes things or people by the use of humor, paradox, indirection, boast, and insult. His nonacademic works include Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Black Man (1997); he is also coeditor of The Dictionary of Global Culture (1997) and The Annotated Uncle Tom's Cabin (2006). In 1999 he wrote and hosted a public television series on Africa and wrote a companion text, Wonders of the African World. Gates has taught at several universities, including Yale (1979–85), Cornell (1985–90), and Harvard (1991–).

Bibliography

See his memoir, Colored People: Letters to My Daughters (1993).


Gates, Henry Louis, Jr. (1950–  ) educator; born in Keyser, W.Va. He graduated from Yale (1973) and was the first African-American to receive a Ph.D. from Cambridge University, England (1979). Sometimes called a "literary archaeologist," he unearthed, edited, and compiled important African-American texts, especially from the slavery period. In addition to his scholarly work, he increasingly wrote and spoke about broader issues relevant to African-Americans and their relations to society at large. His fame made him the subject of "bidding wars" between major universities; he taught at Yale (1979–85), Cornell (1985–90), Duke (1990–91), and Harvard (1991).


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