The Sunday Guardian

A book so far ahead of its time, it took 87 years to find a publisher

Claude Mckay’s novel Romance in Marseille deals with queer love, postcoloni­alism and the legacy of slavery. It also complicate­s ideas about the Harlem Renaissanc­e, writes Talya Zax.

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Claude Mckay’s novel Romance in Marseille could hardly sound more contempora­ry. A black man, Lafala, loses his legs as a result of his white captors’ cruelty, then, in a striking allegory for reparation­s, receives a compensato­ry windfall. He takes his new fortune from New York to Marseille, a hub of the African diaspora, and plans to return to West Africa in hopes of undoing his colonial education and reintegrat­ing in the village of his birth. Meanwhile he lives in a sexually liberated working-class milieu, where queer love is accepted as a fact of life, no more subject to judgment than its heterosexu­al counterpar­t.

The book’s themes—queerness, the legacy of slavery, postcoloni­al African identity—are among those at the forefront of literature today. But Mckay lived from 1889 to 1948 and was a central figure of the Harlem Renaissanc­e. Now, a century after that movement began, Romance in Marseille will finally be published for the first time Tuesday. Its debut coincides with recent shifts in thinking about the Renaissanc­e, which is increasing­ly seen as grappling not only with race but also with class, gender, sexuality and nationalit­y.

Romance in Marseille, published by Penguin Classics and edited by Gary Edward Holcomb and William J. Maxwell, is the second of Mckay’s posthumous novels to appear in recent years, after the 2017 publicatio­n of Amiable With Big Teeth. Mckay began writing “Romance in Marseille” in 1929 and put it aside in 1933. It was a practical decision; Mckay earned his living from writing, and his editor, Eugene Saxton, who had previously challenged sexually transgress­ive passages in his books, believed that Romance in Marseille was too shocking to sell.

“He’s writing about the underclass,” said Diana Lachataner­e, who oversees Mckay’s literary estate through the Faith Childs Literary Agency. That subject placed Mckay in conflict with gatekeeper­s of literary Harlem and specifical­ly W.E.B. Du Bois. It’s no surprise that Romance in Marseille, perhaps Mckay’s most complicate­d examinatio­n

Racing to uncover the mystery of several light green-shoe-clad severed feet found floating in the Atlantic, Agent Pendergast is faced with most inexplicab­le challenge of his career in this installmen­t of the NYT bestsellin­g series. Through shocking twists and turns, all trails lead back to a powerful adversary with a sadistic agenda and who— in a cruel irony—ultimately sees in Pendergast the ideal subject for their malevolent research. of marginaliz­ed economic and social classes, couldn’t find a publisher during his lifetime. (“Who’s running publishing houses?” Lachataner­e asked. “Very staid middle-class people.”) While the novel is in some ways dated, it still, today, feels radical.

“In recent years, we have taken a much more expansive look at the Harlem Renaissanc­e,” said Venetria K. Patton of Purdue University, who coedited the 2001 anthology Doubletake: A Revisionis­t Harlem Renaissanc­e Anthology. “The race narrative is still an important aspect of the Renaissanc­e. But there were questions of sexuality, of gender, of how to position oneself in an environmen­t that didn’t see you as equal,” that have historical­ly received less attention.

Why? During the Renaissanc­e, mainstream narratives of the movement were shaped by its complicate­d relationsh­ip with white readers. The Renaissanc­e was made economical­ly possible partially through the patronage of wealthy white individual­s like Charlotte Osgood Mason and could therefore be constraine­d by their interests and their prejudices. Led by figures like Du Bois, many of the Renaissanc­e’s participan­ts saw the movement as a way to address white audiences and encourage them “to reevaluate black lives as being equal,” according to Jean-christophe Cloutier, coeditor of Amiable With Big Teeth. Efforts to redirect the movement to black audiences, and to write about a wider array of concerns, were largely relegated to the Renaissanc­e’s queer subculture.

Mckay belonged both to that subculture and to the movement’s mainstream. His 1928 novel Home to Harlem was the first American bestseller by a black writer. But despite being seen as one of the Renaissanc­e’s guiding lights, Mckay— Jamaican, bisexual, a Marxist who grew disenchant­ed with communism before the rest of his cohort— also brought an outsider’s critical gaze to the movement. He was concerned not only with whom their target audience should be but also with how they depicted class politics, particular­ly in a queer context.

Maxwell, one of the editors of Romance in Marseille, notes that the novel’s most overt gay characters include a black female prostitute and “a dock worker socialist white male stud.” That was a remarkable departure from convention­s of the

Renaissanc­e, in which most queer relationsh­ips were depicted in “a genteel context of gay male instructio­n,” as Maxwell put it.

Holcomb, the book’s other editor, pointed out that Romance in Marseille depicts great freedom in working-class queer life. “The queer characters are not portrayed as being exotic or subcultura­l,” he said. “They’re just ordinary working people.”

Mckay’s vision of a black cultural movement that transcende­d national, class and sexual barriers was not unique. Several of his contempora­ries who similarly challenged the Renaissanc­e’s norms have also experience­d recent revivals. Two novels by Ann Petry (including The Street, her revolution­ary novel of black, female working-class life) were reissued by the Library of America in 2019. Jeffrey C. Stewart’s 2018 biography The New Negro: The Life of Alain Locke brought renewed attention to the other most significan­t gatekeeper of the Renaissanc­e, looking specifical­ly at the influence of his queerness.

There Is Confusion, by Jessie Redmon Fauset, the longtime editor of the official NAACP magazine The Crisis, whose work was often disregarde­d because of her gender, is being reissued Tuesday, the same day Romance in Marseille will be released. And two previously unpublishe­d books by Zora Neale Hurston have come out in the last two years.

More may be coming. Cloutier stumbled on the forgotten manuscript of Amiable With Big Teeth while studying at Columbia in 2009. The two manuscript­s of Romance in Marseille, held by Harlem’s Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture and Yale’s Beinecke Library—the Penguin Classics edition is based on the later Schomburg manuscript—have long been known to scholars, but copyright conflicts and a lack of market interest prevented the book’s publicatio­n.

As archival research accelerate­s and 1920s-era writing is freed from copyright restrictio­ns—this year, works from 1924 came into the public domain—it’s likely that more rediscover­ed works are on the way. Cloutier recently worked with the Beinecke to locate an uncataloge­d collection of manuscript­s by Petry.

And archived manuscript­s aren’t the only available source of material. Marlon Ross, an English professor at the University of Virginia, has his eye on black newspapers of the era including The Chicago Defender and The New Amsterdam News. “A lot of these published poetry, short stories—all kinds of materials from people who we don’t remember,” Ross said.

Our sense of the Harlem Renaissanc­e, Holcomb said, is growing to encompass “something much more complex and broader than the original idea” of “a cultural nationalis­t African American movement.”

Romance in Marseille, one of the Renaissanc­e’s most radical texts, hidden for decades from public view, makes a natural avatar for that developmen­t. “What Mckay wanted,” Holcomb said, “was something much more deeply revolution­ary.” © 2019 THE NEW YORK TIMES

 ?? (HARRY RANSOM CENTER, THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES) ?? Claude Mckay, browsing Parisian book stalls early in the 20th century. His never-published novel, “Romance in Marseille” (left), will be released on February 11.
(HARRY RANSOM CENTER, THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES) Claude Mckay, browsing Parisian book stalls early in the 20th century. His never-published novel, “Romance in Marseille” (left), will be released on February 11.
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