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R. Baxter Miller
Email: rbmiller@uga.edu
Dr. Miller, Professor of English, holds a Ph.D. from
Brown University. His seven books include The Southern
Trace of Black Critical Theory (1991) and The
Art and Imagination of Langston Hughes (1989; paperback
2006), which won the American Book Award for 1991. A
collaborative edition titled Black American Literature
and Humanism (1981) won international acclaim, and
a subsequent one titled Black American Poets Between
Worlds, 1940-1960 (1986) became an academic bestseller.
His Reference Guide to Langston Hughes and Gwendolyn
Brooks (1978), superseded today by more current
texts, remains a standard source.
Miller, who has written scores of chapters, articles,
and reviews for professional journals, is a co-author
and co-editor (with General Editor Patricia Liggins Hill,
et. al.) of Call and Response: The Riverside Anthology
of the African American Literary Tradition (1998).
As the result of a nomination by the editorial board,
his short story edition of Langston Hughes in the Collected
Works 15 (Missouri 2002) is a volume in the centennial
series. Though the list below condenses his oeuvre to
conserve space, he has written for publication 32 chapters
and anthologized articles, 23 essays for professional
journals, 2 invited encyclopedia articles, 9 review-essays,
and more than thirty reviews. His favorite courses are
those on African American autobiography, the Harlem Renaissance,
and Modern African American Poetics on the graduate level
along with others on verse and fiction at the undergraduate
level.
Selected Bibliography
Forewords and Introductions
- Miller, R.B. (1989). Foreword. Ruthe T. Sheffey, Trajectory:
Fueling the Future and Preserving the African-American
Literary Past (pp. iv-xiv). Baltimore: Morgan
State University Press.
- (1992). Introduction. Richard K. Barksdale, Praisesong
of Survival (pp. 1-14). Urbana: University of
Illinois Press.
- (1996). Foreword. Walter White, The Fire
in the Flint (pp. 1-10). Athens and London: University
of Georgia Press.
- (2006). New Introduction, paperback edition. The
Art and Imagination of Langston Hughes. Lexington:
University Press of Kentucky.
Chapters and Anthologized Articles
- Miller, R.B. (1981). "Does Man Love Art: The
Humanistic Aesthetic of Gwendolyn Brooks." Black
American Literature and Humanism (pp. 95-112).
Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. Reprinted
in Maria K. Mootry and Gary Smith (Ed), A Life
Distilled: Gwendolyn Brooks, Her Poetry and Fiction (pp.
100-115). Urbana: University of Illinois Press (1986).
- (1989). "'A Deeper Literacy': Teaching Invisible
Man from Aboriginal Ground." Susan Resneck
Parr and Pancho Savery (Ed), Approaches to Teaching Invisible
Man (pp. 51-57). New York: Modern Language Association.
- (1990). "Chapter 19." American
Literary Scholarship/1988, (pp. 397-428). Durham
and London: Duke University Press.
- (1995). "The Rewritten Self in African
American Autobiography." Linda Marie Brooks (Ed), Alternative
Identities: The Self in Literature, History, and Theory:
Wellesley Studies in Critical Theory, Literary History,
and Culture, Vol. 7, (pp. 87-104). New York and
London: Garland.
- (1999). "Eva Beatrice Dykes." American
National Biography (p. 22). Raleigh: Oxford University
Press.
- (2001). "The 'Etched Flame' of Margaret
Walker," Maryemma, Graham (Ed), Fields Watered
With Blood: Critical Essays on Margaret Walker (pp.
81-97). Athens and London: University of Georgia Press.
Reprinted from Tennessee Studies in Literature 26
(1981):157-172.
- (2004). "Langston Hughes, 1902-1967: A
Brief Biography." Steve Tracy (Ed), Historical
Guide to Langston Hughes (pp. 23-62). New York:
Oxford University Press.
- (2006). "Physics of Change in Father
and Son," Langston Hughes: The Man, His
Art, and His Continuing Influence, ed. C. James
Trotman (New York & London: Garland, 1995) 131-140;
rpt. Short Story Criticism, 90, ed. Larry Trudeau
(Detroit: Gale, 2006).
Research Journal and Magazine Articles
- Miller, R.B. (1984). "Double Mirror: George
E. Kent and the Scholarly Imagination." Journal
of the Midwest Modern Language Association, 17,
13-23.
- (1984). "The Wasteland and the Flower:
Through Blyden JacksonA Revised Theory for Black
Southern Literature." Southern Literary Journal, 17,
3-11.
- (1986). "One Prime Obligation: The Example
of Therman B. O'Daniel (1908-1986)." Langston
Hughes Review, 5, 5-11.
- (1987). "Baptized Infidel: Play and Critical
Legacy." Black American Literature Forum [African
American Review], 21, 393-414.
- (1991). "Charles T. Davis: Trace of Southern
History." Mississippi Quarterly, 44(1),
151-158.
- (2000). "'Café de la Paix': Mapping
the Harlem Renaissance." South Atlantic Review, 65,
73-94.
- (2002). "Locke and Du Bois." Middle
Atlantic Writer's Association Review, 17 (1&2),
1-13.
- (2005). "Reinvention of Globalization
in Hughes's Stories." MELUS, 30 (1), 69-83,
reprinted in International Journal for the Humanities, 3.6
(2005-2006) 39-45. ISSN 1447-9508. Online 1447-9559.
Humanities-Journal.com.
- (2006) "Nurturing African American Scholars
to Prevail." ADE Bulletin, special issue,
125.
Essays Selected by Editors as Pedagogical Models
- Miller, R.B. (2003). "The 'Crystal Stair Within':
The Apocalyptic Imagination, [Chap 2 from The Art
and Imagination of Langston Hughes]. Gloria Mason
Henderson, William Day, and Sandra Stevenson Walker
(Ed.), Literature and Ourselves: A Thematic Introduction
for Readers and Writers, New York: Longman.
- (2004). "On 'The Negro Speaks of Rivers'," [from
Chap 3 A&I] . Frank Madden (Ed), Exploring Literature:
Writing and Thinking about Fiction, Poetry, Drama, and
the Essay, New York: Longman.
- (2004). "Reader-Response," "Writing
about Gwendolyn Brooks: Critical Viewpoints," Reading
and Writing with Critical Strategies. New York:
Longman.
Published Correspondence
- Miller, R.B. (1990). "Signifying Human: Skipping
Over Visible Critics." PMLA, 1124-25.
- (1996). "The Personal in Literature." PMLA, 111,
1155-56.
Awards and Recognition
- 1975. Haverford College, Research
- 1978. ACLS Conference Grant, "Black American
Literature and Humanism"
- 1985. Black Scholar Professor (national competition),
LeMoyne College, Syracuse, N.Y.
- 1986-87. National Research Council Senior Fellowship
(Ford Foundation), University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill and Fisk
- 1986-87. Lindsay Young Chair, English & Humanities,
University of Tennessee, Knoxville
- 1991. Irvine Foundation Visiting Scholar, University
of San Francisco
- 1991. The American Book Award
- 1994. Regional Designation Humanities Award (with
Will Holmes, John Inscoe, and Robert Pratt), by ACOG
Cultural Olympiad and Southern States Humanities Councils
for "Black and White Perspectives on the American
South"
- 1994-95. Senior Lilly Teaching Fellow
- 1995. Golden Key Honor in scholarship of teaching
- 1996. Who's Who in America
- 1996. Who's Who in Education
- 1996. Who's Who in the World
- 1997. SAMLA Book Prize Committee
- 1999. Davis Fellows Lecturer, University of San Francisco
- 2001. The Langston Hughes Prize
- 2003. Phi Kappa Phi Love of Learning Award
- 2004. Who's Who Among America's Teachers, 2004 (nominator:
graduated student)
- 2005-2006. Student Government Association Teacher
Award
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