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<titleproper encodinganalog="245$a">Guide to the Julian Mayfield Papers, <date>1949-1984</date></titleproper>
<author encodinganalog="245$c">Processed by Andre Elizee; Machine-readable finding aid created by Apex Data Services; revised by Terry Catapano.</author>
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<p>&#x00A9;<date encodingangalog="260$c">2000</date> The New York Public Library, Astor, Lenox and Tilden Foundations. All rights reserved.</p>
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<titleproper encodinganalog="245$a">Guide to the Julian Mayfield Papers, <date>1949-1984</date></titleproper>
<num>Sc MG 339</num>
<publisher encodinganalog="260$b">Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture<lb/>
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The New York Public Library<lb/>
New York, New York </publisher>
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<item>Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture. New York Public Library.</item>
<item>515 Malcolm X Boulevard</item>
<item>New York, NY 10037-1801</item>
<item> (212) 491-2224</item>
<item><extref href="mailto:scmarbref@nypl.org" actuate="onload" show="new">
scmarbref@nypl.org</extref></item> 
<item><extref href="http://nypl.org/research/sc/scm/marb.html" actuate="onload" show="new">http://nypl.org/research/sc/scm/marb.html</extref></item>
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<item>Andre Elizee</item>
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<label>Date Completed: </label>
<item><date>1996</date></item>
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<item>Apex Data Services; Terry Catapano</item>
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<p> &#x00A9;<date encodingangalog="260$c">2000</date> The New York Public Library. Astor, Lenox and Tilden Foundations. All rights reserved.</p>
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<div altrender="preface">
<head>PREFACE</head>
<p>This inventory was prepared as part of an archival preservation project to arrange, describe and catalog resources essential for the study of the post-Civil Rights period of African-American history. The necessary staff and supplies for the &#x201C;Archival Resources for the Study of the Post-Civil Rights Movement&#x201D; project were made available through a combination of funding from the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the City and State of New York.</p>
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<head>Descriptive Summary</head>
<unittitle label="Title" encodinganalog="245$a">Julian Mayfield Papers, <unitdate type="inclusive" encodinganalog="245$f">1949-1984</unitdate></unittitle>
<unitid label="Collection Number">Sc MG 339</unitid>
<origination label="Creator">Mayfield, Julian</origination>
<physdesc label="Size">39 boxes (14.4 linear feet</physdesc>
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<corpname>The New York Public Library<lb/>
Manuscripts, Archives and Rare Books Division<lb/>
Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture</corpname>
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<language langcode="eng">English</language>
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<descgrp><head>Administrative Information</head>
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<head>Source</head>
<p>Gift of Joan Cambridge</p>
<p>SCM 85-30</p>
<p>SCM 86-56</p>
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<processinfo>
<head>Processing Information</head>
<p>Processed by Andre Elizee</p>
<p>1992</p>
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<head>Access</head>
<p>Collection is open to the public.</p>
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<userestrict encodinganalog="540">
<head>Restrictions on Use</head>
<p>For permission to publish, contact the Curator, Manuscripts, Archives and Rare Books Division, Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture.</p>
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<prefercite encodinganalog="524">
<head>Preferred Citation</head>
<p>Julian Mayfield Papers, Sc MG 339, Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, The New York Public Library.</p>
</prefercite>
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<bioghist encodinganalog="545">
<head>Biographical Sketch</head>
<p>Born in Greer, South Carolina in 1928, the oldest child of working-class parents, Julian Mayfield lived a varied career as a novelist, playwright, actor, journalist and critic, aide to two heads of state, and educator and writer-in-residence at several colleges and universities. He grew up and attended the segregated public schools in Washington, D.C., where his parents had migrated in the 1930s to escape segregation and the worst aspects of the Great Depression. Mayfied recalled deciding to become a writer as a child and completing his first novel at the age of 12 or 13. His first exposure to black literature came by way of Richard Wright's autobiographical essay, <emph render="italic">Black Boy, </emph>which he read at 16 while working at the Library of Congress pasting labels on the spine of books. His first encounter with racial discrimination occurred the same year, when he went to the <emph render="italic">Washington Post </emph>to apply for a job as a copy boy, only to be told by the receptionist that the paper did not hire &#x201C;colored&#x201D; copy boys.</p>
<p>The young Mayfield graduated from the renown Paul Lawrence Dunbar High School in 1946. He excelled in oratory and dramatics and was the winner of the American Legion Historical Contest award, the year of his graduation. He enrolled the same year in the U.S. Army and did a tour of duty in the Philippines and in Hawaii. Returning to civilian life after a medical discharge in 1947, he continued his education at Lincoln University and later at the Jefferson School of Social Science in New York (1951-1954). He also spent several years studying acting and drama at the Paul Mann Actors Workshop, one of New York's leading theater schools in the 1950s.</p>
<p>Moving to New York after his first year at Lincoln University, Mayfield did an apprenticeship in the theater while doing odd jobs to sustain himself. His first appearance on the stage was in the 1949 Blackfriar's Guild production of <emph render="italic">City of Kings</emph> in the role of Blessed Martin de Porres, an 18th century black Peruvian later consecrated as a saint in the Catholic Church. His next roles were in the revival of John Wexley's <emph render="italic">They Shall Not Die,</emph> about the Scottsboro trial, and in the Harlem production of <emph render="italic">A Medal for Willie</emph> written by William Branch. His big break in the theater came in 1949 when, as an understudy for the juvenile lead role of Absalom Kumalo in the Kurt Weill-Maxwell Anderson musical <emph render="italic">Lost in the Stars,</emph> he stepped into the role after the lead actor, Sidney Poitier, went to Hollywood to star in his first movie <emph render="italic">No Way Out.</emph> The play was based on the novel <emph render="italic">Cry the Beloved Country</emph> by the white South African writer Alan Paton.</p>
<p>Mayfield also wrote, produced and directed several off-Broadway and summer stock productions between 1949 and 1954. He played the leading role in Stanley Green's off-Broadway production of <emph render="italic">A Wedding in Japan</emph> and appeared in the Harlem production of Sidney Kingsley's <emph render="italic">Detective Story</emph> and in Somerset Maugham's <emph render="italic">Rain.</emph> He directed and, together with Maxwell Granville, produced Ossie Davis's first play, <emph render="italic">Alice in Wonder,</emph> which opened at the Elks Community Theater in Harlem in 1952. Mayfield also wrote two one-act plays, <emph render="italic">A World Full of Men</emph> and <emph render="italic">The Other Foot,</emph> as a prelude to that performance. All three plays received critical acclaim and attracted sizable black audiences. Two other plays written by Mayfield, <emph render="italic">Fire</emph> and <emph render="italic">417,</emph> were produced off-Broadway and in summer stock. <emph render="italic">Fire</emph> was produced in 1949 by the Group 20 Players. <emph render="italic">417</emph> was published in the January 1955 issue of <emph render="italic">Contemporary Reader.</emph></p>
<p>In his unpublished autobiography, Mayfield claimed he joined the Communist Party in the late 1940s, shortly after coming to New York. He was a member of various left-wing and communist front organizations, including the Committee for the Negro in the Arts (CNA), and participated in numerous campaigns, such as those to help save the lives of Willie McGee, the Martinsville Seven, and Ethel and Julius Rosenberg. He contributed articles to Paul Robeson's newspaper, <emph render="italic">Freedom, </emph>and was part of Robeson's security detail in Peekskill, New York when the increasingly controversial singer performed there in the face of white racists who rioted and threatened to kill him. Although he claimed only a rank and file membership in the Party, Mayfield's status was more that of a minor celebrity, in light of his work as a writer and producer in the theater and his performance in <emph render="italic">Lost in the Stars.</emph> He resigned his chairmanship of the CNA Writers' Workshop in 1954, citing &#x201C;petty gossip and personal malice&#x201D; against him, and alluded to having left the Party after the Soviet invasion of Hungary in 1956.</p>
<p>That same year he met and married a young Puerto Rican activist and physician, Dr. Ana Livia Cordero. The couple moved to Puerto Rico where Mayfield worked for the next three years as an announcer and newscaster for the island's first English-language radio station, WHOA, and as an editor and critic for the <emph render="italic">Puerto Rico World Journal. </emph>He also wrote two television dramas which were translated and broadcast over local television. He completed his first two novels in Puerto-Rico, enlisting the help of his friend John Henrik Clarke in New York secure a publisher.</p>
<p><emph render="italic">The Hit </emph>is a short novel based on Mayfield's earlier play, <emph render="italic">417.</emph> <emph render="italic">The Long Night, </emph>another short novel based in Harlem, tells the ordeal of a 12-year-old boy, Steely Brown, who loses his mother's winnings from the numbers game. The two books were published by Vanguard Press in 1957 and 1958 respectively, and were favorably and extensively reviewed. The author emerged almost overnight as a novelist of considerable stature. Pocket Books signed <emph render="italic">The Hit </emph>for paperback distribution in November 1957. Karamu House in Cleveland offered to work the novel into a musical play, but Vanguard declined in favor of a hoped-for Broadway contract. A third novel entitled <emph render="italic">Deadline,</emph> also written in 1957, was submitted to Ace Books but was never published. Meanwhile, the author had begun work on a more ambitious novel of a town in a border state being torn apart as a result of efforts to desegregate. The new work, <emph render="italic">The Grand Parade, </emph>was published by Vanguard Press in 1961.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, in 1959, Mayfield and his wife had moved back to New York with their newborn son Rafael. There, the author became part of a collective search for identity among New York's black intellectuals, spurred in part by the wave of independence among African countries. His landmark paper &#x201C;Into the Mainstream and Oblivion&#x201D; was delivered at the First Conference of Negro Writers organized by the American Society for African Culture (AMSAC) in 1959, and was published in an AMSAC compilation, <emph render="italic">The American Negro Writer and His Roots </emph>(1960), and in several anthologies. The essay spelled out the fear among black nationalists, activists and writers that the diversity and the originality of the African-American experience would become casualties of the integration dream. The author was also skeptical of the effectiveness of the nonviolent strategy espoused by the Montgomery Bus Boycott led by Martin Luther King, Jr. and by the emerging sit-in movement associated with the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee.</p>
<p>In 1960 the Mayfields went to Cuba with a group of African-American intellectuals as guests of the Fidel Castro government for the first anniversary of the Cuban revolution. There the author met Robert F. Williams, the former president of the local branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) in Monroe, N.C., who had become the leader of an armed resistance movement against the Ku Klux Klan. Williams and his armed men had successfully fought Klan violence against the local black community and was hailed as a hero in Cuba. But in the U.S. he had been suspended by the national office of the NAACP and was shunned by liberal whites and integrationist blacks alike. Mayfield on the other hand had hailed Williams as the prototype of a new kind of leader in the struggle for black freedom, and had been invited to come to Monroe.</p>
<p>Back in New York after August 1960, Mayfield was among the group of black activists and intellectuals who welcomed Castro to Harlem. Ostensibly dissatisfied with his reception at the Commodore Hotel, Castro had moved to the Theresa Hotel in Harlem and was enthusiastically received by the Harlem crowds. Returning to New York in February 1961 after a trip to Monroe, Mayfield also joined a protest at the United Nations against U.S. aggression against Cuba, and helped draft a full-page advertisement, &#x201C;An Appeal to Conscience,&#x201D; for the Fair Play for Cuba Committee. The statement denouncing the 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion was published in <emph render="italic">The New York Times. </emph>As a cosigner to the Appeal, Mayfield was subsequently subpoenaed by Senator James Eastland to appear before his Senate Internal Security Subcommittee. Later during his residency in Ghana, Mayfield claimed he worked closely with the Cuban Embassy there and had several long talks with Che Guevara during the latter's trip to Africa. His short story &#x201C;The Last Days of Duncan Street&#x201D; appeared in <emph render="italic">Lunes de Revoluci&#x00F3;n, </emph>a literary magazine published in Havana (1960).</p>
<p>The April 1961 issue of <emph render="italic">Commentary </emph>magazine featured an article by Mayfield, &#x201C;Challenge to Negro Leadership.&#x201D; The article took the NAACP leadership to task, asserting that the tactics favored by the established civil rights leadership were ineffective and could only yield token results. The author praised young militant leaders, like Robert Williams, who had come to the fore to lead the increasingly militant and dissatisfied black masses. Mayfield was commissioned by the York, Pennsylvania <emph render="italic">Call and Daily </emph>in August 1961 to report on the situation in Monroe. Meanwhile the governor of North Carolina ordered Williams and his supporters arrested on charges of armed insurrection. Fearing for their lives, Mayfield drove the Williams family out of the South in his own car, along with Mae Mallory, an African-American activist from New York who had also gone down to Monroe to lend support. The Monroe leader subsequently went into exile in Cuba. Mayfield for his part fled to Canada and later to Ghana.</p>
<p>It is not clear how much preparation had already occurred prior to Mayfield's last visit to Monroe, or how he came to settle on Ghana, or who introduced him to the circle of power around Nkrumah. The author quickly became the unofficial leader of the African-American community in Ghana and enjoyed direct access to the President. Later, he would invariably refer to his Ghana years as the most rewarding and productive period in his life and the beginning of his exploration of the theme of power as it relates to black people. Mayfield worked as a writer and editor in the office of the President for the duration of his stay. He was also an active journalist and was the founder and editor of <emph render="italic">African Review, </emph>an international magazine of political and economic affairs. Additionally, he was the chief documentalist for the Accra Assembly, an international peace conference convened by Nkrumah in 1962, and edited the proceedings of the conference, published the following year with an introduction by Nkrumah (<emph render="italic">The World Without the Bomb: the Papers of the Accra Assembly, </emph>Ghana Government Press, 1963). Also in 1963, he completed a semiautobiographical novel of Broadway and Harlem life in the 1950s, <emph render="italic">Look Pretty for the People.</emph></p>
<p>In 1964, Mayfield was host to Malcolm X in Ghana during the latter's trip to West Africa, and helped organize the first international branch of the Organization of Afro-American Unity. He traveled with Malcolm X to Egypt and wrote an authoritative essay in the <emph render="italic">Ghanaian Times, </emph>defending Malcolm X against charges of racism brought in the same publication by the white South African communist expatriate and adviser to Nkrumah, H.M. Bosner. He was also a vocal critic of American racism and of U.S. policy toward Africa, and led a demonstration in front of the U.S. embassy in Accra on the day of the 1963 March on Washington. The author left Ghana three weeks before the military coup which overthrew Nkrumah's government in February 1966, partly because he had become estranged from his wife and partly to work on a book project, &#x201C;The Living Ghana,&#x201D; which he had started in collaboration with another African-American expatriate Leslie Alexander Lacy. The book was never completed.</p>
<p>After Ghana, Mayfield settled in Spain where he began work on a new book that would put the Nkrumah legacy and the new situation in Ghana into perspective. The coup regime had confiscated his papers and imprisoned his wife before deporting her peremptorily with their two children. With the help of his New York agent and his former Ghana associate, the historian Conor Cruise O'Brien, he secured a one-year grant from the Rabinowitz Foundation to complete the manuscript. &#x201C;The Lonely Warrior&#x201D; was rejected by several publishers because it lacked, they said, the solid documentation his papers would have provided. A rewriting of the book was completed in 1967 and was rejected for similar reasons. Mayfield was convinced for his part that his balanced accounting of the Nkrumah era was the chief reason behind the rejections, especially since more hastily written and poorly researched accounts were hungrily sought out by publishers. Meanwhile he completed a play, <emph render="italic">Fount of the Nation,</emph> based on his experience in Ghana, which he described as a &#x201C;dramatic portrayal of power as it works in many underdeveloped countries where principles, morality and high idealism are often sacrificed to the demands of harsh economic and political reality.&#x201D; The play received favorable comments and criticism from Paul Mann and from Howard Stein, a professor of drama at Yale University, but was not produced until ten years later when it opened for the first time at the Arena Playhouse in Baltimore, Maryland.</p>
<p>Among the many reasons for his return to the United States in 1967, Mayfield listed the failure of the Nkrumah government, the persistence of a neo-colonial mentality among many of Africa's new rulers, the rise of the Black Power movement in the United States, and his own continuing search for revolution. While in Spain, he had applied for and was granted a Junior Post-Doctoral Fellowship for the 1967-68 academic year by the Society for the Humanities at Cornell University, with a waiver of the Ph.D. requirement. The fellowship granted a $10,000 stipend for the nine-month assignment and called for the equivalent of one unit of teaching per term. Mayfield submitted a proposal for a series of lectures on &#x201C;Negro Goals as Reflected in Negro Writings,&#x201D; arguing that a study of representative African-American writers over a given period of time could provide the answer or answers to the question &#x201C;What Does the Negro Want?&#x201D; In a later autobiographical sketch, he recalled his association on campus with the black students who led an armed occupation of the Cornell administrative building in 1968. He was also active in support work for SNCC and the Black Panther Party.</p>
<p>The following academic year, Mayfield accepted an appointment in the Albert Schweitzer Program in the Humanities at New York University, with a requirement for teaching two undergraduate courses and a graduate seminar. Conor Cruise O'Brien, the director of the program, had approached the author for this assignment in late 1966 and was instrumental in his appointment the previous year at Cornell. Mayfield's course &#x201C;The Black Writer in America&#x201D; attracted more than 100 students over a two-semester period, and provided a provocative assessment of the relationship of the black writer with the black revolution. His other undergraduate course, &#x201C;Contemporary Writing in Africa,&#x201D; looked at the impact of colonialism on African writers, the problems of African writers since independence and the role of literature in the struggle for liberation in Southern Africa. Additionally, he developed a graduate seminar, &#x201C;Crime and Punishment in the United States,&#x201D; to explore various theories of justice and how they affected communities of color, immigrants and the poor in general.</p>
<p>In 1970-71, Mayfield returned to Cornell as a Distinguished Visiting Fellow in the Africana Studies and Research Program. He taught two courses, &#x201C;Black American Writing and Politics&#x201D; and &#x201C;Black Techniques of Survival,&#x201D; which he developed as a special two-week seminar for other colleges and universities. He also helped design a Distinguished Africana Lecture Series to attract prestigious black scholars from other institutions for brief lecture series in the Africana Studies and Research Center.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, Mayfield continued experimenting in an expanding number of genres. He had completed an African suspense novel, <emph render="italic">Death at Karamu, </emph>before leaving Spain. His articles and essays during that period include &#x201C;Literary Lions and Values&#x201D; (<emph render="italic">Negro Digest, </emph>Jan. 1968), &#x201C;New Mainstream&#x201D; (<emph render="italic">Nation, </emph>May 1968); &#x201C;Crisis or Crusade,&#x201D; an article-review of Harold Cruse's <emph render="italic">Crisis of the Negro Intellectual</emph> (<emph render="italic">Negro Digest, </emph>June 1968); &#x201C;Legitimacy of the Black Revolution&#x201D; (<emph render="italic">Nation, </emph>April 1968); &#x201C;The Negro Writer and the Stickup&#x201D; (<emph render="italic">Boston University Journal, </emph>1969), and &#x201C;You Touch My Black Aesthetic and I'll Touch Yours&#x201D; (<emph render="italic">The Black Aesthetic, </emph>edited by Addison Gayle, 1970). He also lectured frequently on Black Power and the theme of black revolution and was interviewed on several radio and television programs, including the popular <emph render="italic">Black Journal</emph> (1969). In line with Black Power orthodoxy, he believed, in 1969, that violent confrontation was the only means to structural change in the United States.</p>
<p>In early 1968, Mayfield accepted a contract to coauthor the screenplay for an adaptation of the 1935 film <emph render="italic">The Informer</emph> about the 1916-19 Irish uprising against British rule. Jules Dassin, who had returned to the U.S. after a twenty-year exile in Europe, had persuaded Paramount Films to recast the story with an all black cast and mirror it after the recent black uprisings in the United States. He not only hired Mayfield to co-write the screenplay with himself and Ruby Dee, he convinced the author to accept the lead role of Tank, a confused unemployed steel worker who betrays a group of black militants after they had robbed a gun and ammunition warehouse the night of Martin Luther King, Jr.'s assassination. Mayfield's only other movie credits prior to <emph render="italic">Uptight</emph> were small roles in <emph render="italic">Virgin Isles</emph> (1958) and <emph render="italic">Band Leader</emph> (1959), starring Sidney Poitier and John Cassavetes, respectively. His last film appearance, several years later, was in the Public Broadcasting System adaptation of William Forde's play <emph render="italic">Transition,</emph> along with Ruby Dee and Alice Childress.</p>
<p>Seeking tranquility and a secluded place to write, Mayfield had purchased a farm in Spencer, New York in 1968, a short distance from the Cornell campus where he was teaching. Shortly afterward, in partnership with his friend Robert Slater, he launched Chaka Productions to market black plays and novels for stage and screen adaptations. Their greatest success was in the production of <emph render="italic">Black Hands,</emph> a montage of black poetry and music originally presented at Carnegie Hall. The show consisted of poems and songs by Maya Angelou, Amiri Baraka, H. Rap Brown, Nikki Giovanni, Larry Neal and others, joined together by a narrative written by Mayfield. Chaka Productions enlarged the original performance and presented it at schools and colleges around the country.</p>
<p>Mayfield's other writing projects after his return from Ghana included an anthology of ten short stories by black authors published by Bantam Books in 1971 and a three-book series, <emph render="italic">The Black Abolitionists,</emph> <emph render="italic">The Black Man in the Civil War</emph> and <emph render="italic">The Black Man in the Reconstruction,</emph> for the Juvenile Division at Random House which was never published. He also wrote several screenplays for television and for educational audiovisual programs, including: <emph render="italic">The Odyssey of W.E.B. DuBois,</emph> a two-part film strip for the high school level (1970); <emph render="italic">An Introduction to Edgar Allen Poe</emph> written for Educational Audio-Visual Inc.; and <emph render="italic">The History of the Black Man in the United States,</emph> a widely distributed eight-part sound and film strip produced for high school students in 1969. Under the pseudonym of Gerald Orsini, he wrote a segment &#x201C;Viva Paco!&#x201D; for the National Broadcasting Company's dramatic television series <emph render="italic">Johnny Stacatto.</emph> He also wrote and appeared in a segment for the Columbia University-WCBS-TV series <emph render="italic">Black Heritage,</emph> and completed an original screenplay <emph render="italic">Children of Anger</emph> for a documentary film on mental health produced by Irving Jacoby in 1970. At the same time, he had also begun work on a collection of stories, &#x201C;Tales of the Lido,&#x201D; centered around a popular night club in Accra frequented in the 1960s by African-American expatriates in Ghana.</p>
<p>In the wake of his well-publicized appearance in <emph render="italic">Uptight,</emph> the author secured a $10,000 advance from Random House for an autobiography which he tentatively titled &#x201C;Which Way Does the Blood River Run.&#x201D; Mayfield envisioned the autobiography as a &#x201C;first-hand account of the development of political ideas, attitudes and trends in the black community since the Second World War.&#x201D; By his own account, the author knew or was associated with many of the black men and women who represented &#x201C;important points in contemporary black history&#x201D; on two continents. The book remained unpublished although a revised draft was due for publication the year of his death under a new title, &#x201C;Send Me My Grandmother.&#x201D; </p>
<p>The expatriate dream of a life free of racial discrimination reclaimed Mayfield in 1971. Inspired by a letter from his friend, the artist Tom Feelings, who had recently relocated as a planning officer in the Ministry of Education in Guyana, Mayfield traveled there to meet with Prime-Minister Forbes Burnham who offered him a post as a special adviser in his Ministry of Information. Mayfield accepted, &#x201C;not for any great philosophical reason,&#x201D; he wrote to Feelings, but, in addition to the contributions he thought he could make, &#x201C;because I'd like to get away from certain people here.&#x201D; His decision was also influenced by financial difficulties due to the shortcomings of the film <emph render="italic">Uptight</emph> at the box office and the failure of Chaka Productions as a business venture, and also by the frustration of not having any of his major works published since his return from Ghana. Putting his farm up for sale, the author departed for Guyana in November 1971.</p>
<p>In Guyana, Mayfield first worked in the Ministry of Education and Culture as editorial consultant and adviser to the minister, Elvin McDavid, and later as a special adviser for political affairs to the Prime Minister. His work involved designing a six-week training seminar for new information officers, participation in the Social, Political and Economic Council, an elite group within the ruling party, and publication of <emph render="italic">New Nation International, </emph>a special edition of the government-sponsored <emph render="italic">New Nation </emph>newspaper, for overseas distribution. Mayfield also served as a speech writer for McDavid and Burnham and prepared a selection of Burnham quotations and speeches for publication. His most important contribution, however, was his participation in a commission appointed by Burnham to design the country's National Service, a compulsory program designed to combat the exodus of Guyanese youth to Europe and the United States by enrolling them in development programs. The program lost most of its impact when Burnham consented under pressure from the opposition to abandon its compulsory requirement.</p>
<p>Mayfield married his second wife, Joan Cambridge, a Guyanese writer and colleague in the Ministry of Information and Culture, in 1973. Their salaries as government officials were adequate for the couple's local needs but afforded little else, considering the low rate of exchange of the local currency. He sought unsuccessfully to hire himself out as a foreign correspondent to the magazine <emph render="italic">Black World </emph>and other U.S. publications. In collaboration with his new wife, Mayfield also began work on &#x201C;Murder on the East Bank,&#x201D; a new novel &#x201C;with enough violence and sex for anyone.&#x201D; At the same time he was preparing a film script based on the life of King Henri Christophe of Haiti, in collaboration with William Marshall as producer and lead actor.</p>
<p>Mayfield's other major writing project in Guyana was a biography of Burnham for Howard University Press. The author envisioned his new project as a candid effort to tell the story of Guyana to African-American readers. Initially entitled &#x201C;Stamping Berbice with Burnham&#x201D; and conceived as a primer, the book was based on his own observations and on several lengthy conversations with Burnham. Paula Giddings, his editor, requested a fuller discussion of the country's physical landscape and political culture. A second draft under the title &#x201C;Burnham of Guyana&#x201D; was also found unsatisfactory because it did not convincingly make the case of Guyana as an important country or of Burnham as a significant Third World leader. The author seemed to have abandoned the project after his return to the United States. </p>
<p>It is not clear from the collection why Mayfield left Guyana in September 1974. The reason cited in correspondence with Guyanese officials is medical: a doctor's certificate issued in New York referred to &#x201C;a moderately severe form of hypertension which will require his absence from work for a period of several weeks during which time extensive tests will have to be performed at major institutions in the United States.&#x201D; Yet months before his departure he had communicated to friends in New York his longing for a &#x201C;black community in the arts&#x201D; that was lacking in Guyana. &#x201C;I had done my work in Guyana,&#x201D; he wrote some years later, &#x201C;at least all the important work that was likely to come my way.&#x201D; Still, in an undated letter from Washington to Burnham, he pleaded for a six-month leave of absence in order to reactivate his writing and teaching careers and earn enough U.S. dollars to purchase a farm in Guyana.</p>
<p>Readjustment in the United States was difficult and slow. He applied for a position or a consultancy with the District of Columbia's Bicentennial Commission. By the fall of 1975, he had secured an appointment as Lecturer in the Afro-American Studies Department at the University of Maryland in College Park. Meanwhile his novel <emph render="italic">The Hit </emph>was released as a motion picture by the African-American director and producer Woodie King. King had also bought the rights to his second novel, <emph render="italic">The Long Night, </emph>and had contracted Mayfield to write the screenplay in 1973. Although there had been an earlier screenplay written by Robert Sharpe, Mayfield felt there was a need to update the storyline in light of the black rebellions of the 1960s and the new market for black films.</p>
<p>Completed in 1975, <emph render="italic">The Long Night</emph> was the only American film featured at the New Directors series at the Museum of Modern Art in 1976. Meanwhile Mayfield had also begun work on two new screenplays: <emph render="italic">The Times That Made Men Mad</emph> and <emph render="italic">Jessie Mae.</emph> He also submitted another screenplay entitled <emph render="italic">Sammy</emph> to a Hollywood agent in 1976, although there is no evidence of this title as an original work among his papers. Meanwhile he continued lecturing on college campuses and at black writers' conferences on such topics as the U.S. Bicentennial, the need for a black critical movement, and the impact of Africa on American culture. He was also the subject of several feature articles, including &#x201C;The Goal of Julian Mayfield: Fusing Art and Politics&#x201D; (<emph render="italic">The Washington Post, </emph>July 7, 1975).</p>
<p>Mayfield had applied for and was awarded a Senior Fulbright-Hays Fellowship to teach American studies in Germany for the academic year 1976-77. (His initial choice of country had been Nigeria, Kenya or Brazil.) His assignment was at Gesamthochschule Paderborn, a comprehensive university in a small conservative city. His teaching requirements consisted of two seminars on &#x201C;Post-World War I American Literature&#x201D; and &#x201C;Black American Literature and Politics,&#x201D; and a lecture series on twentieth century black writers. Writing from Paderborn in November 1976, he reported with satisfaction that he was keeping his contacts with students and faculty to a minimum, and that he now had enough time and serenity to concentrate on his writing. His agreement with the Fulbright Commission also included a European and North African lecture tour under the auspices of the U.S. Information Service and local universities. Mayfield traveled to Berlin, Copenhagen, Vienna, Ankara, Athens and Tunis, and lectured on such topics as African-American historiography, American culture, contemporary black fiction and the social responsibility of writers and artists. </p>
<p>At the end of his Fulbright year, the author returned to the University of Maryland at College Park to a joint appointment between the Afro-American Studies Program and the English Department. He developed several new courses in the two departments, including &#x201C;The Business of the Arts&#x201D; for students interested in publishing, advertising and the visual arts; &#x201C;Significant Black Voices in Modern American Literature;&#x201D; and a seminar on the life and work of W.E.B. DuBois. He also initiated a newsletter to publicize the activities of faculty members in the Afro-American Studies Program and launched the Frederick Douglass-Paul Robeson Union, an elite organization for students interested in public affairs, in order to stimulate black intellectual activity on campus. The insecurity of short-term nontenured positions created a longing throughout the remainder of his life for a financial breakthrough that would enable him to write full time. Prestigious though it was, the Fulbright fellowship, with the travel and other expenses it occasioned, had only added to his financial woes. In November 1977, he filed for bankruptcy, the second time in less than ten years, in order to alleviate his accumulated debts.</p>
<p>From the Fall of 1978 to the time of his death, Mayfield was Writer-in-Residence and graduate associate professor in the English Department at Howard University. He sought the position even though it carried a full teaching load presumably because it paid more than the joint appointment at the University of Maryland. Some of the courses he taught include &#x201C;American Negro Literature,&#x201D; &#x201C;Technical Writings&#x201D;, &#x201C;Twentieth Century American Literature&#x201D;, &#x201C;Introduction to Drama,&#x201D; and a creative writing workshop. He was also required to participate in other classes within his areas of expertise, including communications, American literature and the works of W.E.B. DuBois. In addition, he served on dissertation committees for several graduate students, and was a faculty adviser for the Howard University broadcasting system. Mayfield also lectured and delivered papers at various conferences at Howard and other universities, including a conference on Negritude held at Hampshire College in September 1978 and a symposium organized by Rosa Guy and Claudia Tate in 1983 on &#x201C;Recent Themes in Black Women's Writings.&#x201D; His paper &#x201C;An Approach to the Dangers of Afro-American Extermination,&#x201D; delivered at the Fourth National Conference of Afro-American Writers at Howard University in 1978, reverberated in the media for its uncompromising assessment that genocide remained a major threat to black lives in the post-civil rights era.</p>
<p>By the early 1980s, the liabilities of a full-time teaching job had become a serious impediment to Mayfield's writing career. Random House had rejected two different drafts of his autobiography, and he clearly lacked the time or the concentration needed for the major rewriting suggested by his editor. His memoir on African-American expatriates in Ghana required an extended stay in West Africa, but neither Howard University nor the various funding sources he queried would honor his grant requests. Meanwhile he became the Washington Bureau Chief of Time Capsule Inc., the nonprofit publisher of <emph render="italic">Inside Out, </emph>a magazine of prison literature. He also joined the editorial staff of the <emph render="italic">Washington North Star, </emph>a biweekly newspaper launched in 1981, for which he wrote a regular column, &#x201C;Potomac Reflexions.&#x201D; In a more mundane vein, he started a ghost-writing venture, &#x201C;J&amp;J Productions,&#x201D; which offered his writing skills for hire to businessmen, graduate students and Ph.D. candidates. </p>
<p>Beginning in the late 1970s, the author had been trying to develop his own formula for a best-selling novel, a mix between the mystery and romance genres. His first effort in this vein was a conventional detective novel. The two unfinished drafts that have survived are titled &#x201C;The College Park Murders&#x201D; and &#x201C;a Quiet Rage at College Park.&#x201D; His last unpublished completed novel, &#x201C;The Gang in Suite 16,&#x201D; (1981) is an erotic tale of four white coeds and their adventures at an imaginary university in upstate New York. Another attempt begun in 1982 featured an African-American veteran, Brewster Champion, and a thirty-year-old assistant professor, Dormita Christy, in a Washington, D.C. college setting. These three works were to be published under a pseudonym by Second Chance at Love, a division of Jove Publications.</p>
<p>In another effort to extricate himself from the Howard University environment, which he found stifling, Mayfield applied for a teaching job in Nigeria in 1980. A return to West Africa &#x201C;would be an emotional and intellectual tonic which would release the great creative energy within,&#x201D; wrote a colleague at Howard in recommending him. His application to Bayero University in the northern Nigerian city of Kano was not accepted, however. Later, in 1982, he returned to South Carolina for the funeral of an uncle, and decided to retire to the area near Greer or in the Sea Islands. In his latter years, the author had been suffering from hypertension and was hospitalized in February 1984. Hospitalized again in early October 1984 in the Coronary Unit at Washington Adventist Hospital in Takoma Park, Maryland, Julian Mayfield died of cardiac arrest on the twentieth of that month. He was 56 years old.</p>
<p>Julian Mayfield's career as an essayist and creative writer began in the 1950s in the tradition of black intellectuals like Richard Wright and Ralph Ellison who sought to combat social oppression through realistic portrayals of black lives. During the 1960s and early 1970s, the twin impact of the civil rights movement and his experiences abroad as a &#x201C;witness to power&#x201D; brought on a new urge to define a black esthetic to replace &#x201C;the old programs... that have failed us&#x201D; and a growing fascination with the manipulation of power by blacks &#x201C;who could make decisions over their own lives.&#x201D; By the late 1970s, with the failure of the &#x201C;Black Revolution&#x201D; and the emergence of a more conservative mood in the United States, he became concerned with the economic &#x201C;obsolescence&#x201D; of African-Americans and the possibility of a genocide against them.</p>
</bioghist>
<scopecontent encodinganalog="520">
<head>Scope and Content</head>
<p>The Julian Mayfield Papers document Mayfield's career as a writer, educator and actor, and his activities as a political expatriate in West Africa and Guyana. His early career up to 1965 is poorly documented due to the confiscation of his papers in the aftermath of the 1966 military coup in Ghana. There was no discernible order in the collection. An artificial arrangement into six series was therefore imposed.</p>
</scopecontent>
<dsc type="combined">
<head>Series Descriptions/Container List</head>
<c01 level="series">
<did>
<unittitle>PERSONAL</unittitle>
</did>
<scopecontent>
<p><emph render="bold">PERSONAL PAPERS, </emph><emph render="bold">1942-1984 (1.2 lin. ft.)</emph></p>
<p>Divided into five subseries and several ungrouped files. The <emph render="bold">Biographical </emph>subseries includes some ephemera (newspapers clippings, loose scrapbook pages and theater programs) from Mayfield's early career in the theater. General articles and obituaries about the author are also located here. The <emph render="bold">Autobiographical </emph>subseries consists of episodic notes the author was compiling toward an autobiography. Included are recollections of his association with Paul Robeson, his activities in Puerto Rico and Ghana, and a brief handwritten journal of a return trip to his native Greer, South Carolina, in the early 1980s. The file Diaries and Notes includes a journal entry on his return trip to the United States after his six-year voluntary exile in Ghana and Europe, various reflections on the possibility of a revolution in the United States and on &#x201C;Becoming a Revolutionary,&#x201D; and pages from a later notebook on Langston Hughes. The <emph render="bold">Family </emph>subseries consists for the most part of personal and professional correspondence and other documents pertaining to Joan Cambridge and her activities in Guyana during Mayfield's stay in that country.</p>
<p>The extensive <emph render="bold">Financial </emph>subseries includes publishers' contracts, royalty statements and bankruptcy files. The pre-1965 files provide the only documentation for several unknown aspects of the author's life, including a 1959 novel, &#x201C;Dowell,&#x201D; his association with the television series <emph render="italic">Johnny Staccato</emph> under the pseudonym of Gerald Orsini, a collection of short stories, &#x201C;Duncan Street,&#x201D; slated for publication in 1959, and translation rights to his early work. <emph render="bold">Consultancy and Projects </emph>relate mostly to Chaka Productions and the stage production of <emph render="italic">Black Hands,</emph> and to Time Capsule, Inc., an umbrella organization that published a journal of prison literature, <emph render="italic">Time Capsule, </emph>and several other magazines.</p>
</scopecontent>
<c02 level="subseries">
<did>
<unittitle>Biographical</unittitle>
</did>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">1</container>
<container type="folder">1</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Resumes</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">1</container>
<container type="folder">2</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Biographical Sketches</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">1</container>
<container type="folder">3</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Early Career</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">1</container>
<container type="folder">4</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Articles about Julian Mayfield</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">1</container>
<container type="folder">5</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Obituaries, <unitdate>1984</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">1</container>
<container type="folder">6</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Hospitalization and Death</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">1</container>
<container type="folder">7</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Condolences</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">1</container>
<container type="folder">8</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Printed Matter</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
</c02>
<c02 level="subseries">
<did>
<unittitle>Autobiographical</unittitle>
</did>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">1</container>
<container type="folder">9</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>&#x201C;Which Way Does the Blood-Red River Run?&#x201D; - Notes, Fragments</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">1</container>
<container type="folder">10</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>&#x201C;Send Me My Grandmother&#x201D; - Notes</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">1</container>
<container type="folder">11</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>&#x201C;Walking With Paul&#x201D;</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">1</container>
<container type="folder">12</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>&#x201C;La Borinquena&#x201D;</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">1</container>
<container type="folder">13</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>&#x201C;Materials From Tales of the Lido&#x201D;</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">1</container>
<container type="folder">14</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>&#x201C;Diaries and Notes&#x201D;</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">1</container>
<container type="folder">15</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>&#x201C;Greer Journal&#x201D;</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
</c02>
<c02 level="subseries">
<did>
<unittitle>Family</unittitle>
</did>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">1</container>
<container type="folder">16</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Correspondence, <unitdate type="inclusive">1960-1979</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">1</container>
<container type="folder">17</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Parents, <unitdate type="inclusive">1948, 1961-1981</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">1</container>
<container type="folder">18</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Ana Livia Cordero, <unitdate type="inclusive">1965-1969</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">1</container>
<container type="folder">19</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Cordero-Mayfield Children</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">1</container>
<container type="folder">20</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Dorothy Mayfield, <unitdate>1946</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">2</container>
<container type="folder">1</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Joan Cambridge, <unitdate type="inclusive">1968-1984, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
</c02>
<c02>
<did>
<container type="box">2</container>
<container type="folder">2-3</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Address Books</unittitle>
</did>
</c02>
<c02>
<did>
<container type="box">2</container>
<container type="folder">4</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Identification and Passports</unittitle>
</did>
</c02>
<c02>
<did>
<container type="box">2</container>
<container type="folder">5</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Ghana Miscellaneous Documents</unittitle>
</did>
</c02>
<c02>
<did>
<container type="box">2</container>
<container type="folder">6</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Certificates</unittitle>
</did>
</c02>
<c02>
<did>
<container type="box">2</container>
<container type="folder">7</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Military Service</unittitle>
</did>
</c02>
<c02>
<did>
<container type="box">2</container>
<container type="folder">8</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>University of Massachusetts, PhD Program</unittitle>
</did>
</c02>
<c02>
<did>
<container type="box">2</container>
<container type="folder">9</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Application to Teach in Nigeria</unittitle>
</did>
</c02>
<c02>
<did>
<container type="box">2</container>
<container type="folder">10</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Political</unittitle>
</did>
</c02>
<c02>
<did>
<container type="box">2</container>
<container type="folder">11</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Travel</unittitle>
</did>
</c02>
<c02>
<did>
<container type="box">2</container>
<container type="folder">12</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>New Ideas</unittitle>
</did>
</c02>
<c02>
<did>
<container type="box">2</container>
<container type="folder">13</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>&#x201C;Things to Do&#x201D;</unittitle>
</did>
</c02>
<c02>
<did>
<container type="box">2</container>
<container type="folder">14</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Notes</unittitle>
</did>
</c02>
<c02 level="subseries">
<did>
<unittitle>Financial</unittitle>
</did>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">2</container>
<container type="folder">15</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive">1957-1959</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">2</container>
<container type="folder">16</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive">1960-1961</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">3</container>
<container type="folder">1</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive">1962-1965</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">3</container>
<container type="folder">2</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive">1966-1967</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">3</container>
<container type="folder">3</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive">1968-1969</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">3</container>
<container type="folder">4</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive">1970-1973</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">3</container>
<container type="folder">5</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive">1974-1976</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">3</container>
<container type="folder">6</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive">1977-1984</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">3</container>
<container type="folder">7</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Bankruptcy</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">3</container>
<container type="folder">8</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Housing/ Real Estate</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">3</container>
<container type="folder">9</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Income Tax</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">3</container>
<container type="folder">10</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Royalty Statements</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">3</container>
<container type="folder">11</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Writers Guild of America</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">3</container>
<container type="folder">12</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Miscellaneous and Fragments</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
</c02>
<c02 level="subseries">
<did>
<unittitle>Consultancy and Projects</unittitle>
</did>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">3</container>
<container type="folder">13</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Chaka Productions</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">3</container>
<container type="folder">14</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Westchester's Bicentennial Committee</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">3</container>
<container type="folder">15</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Theater Guild Seminar</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">3</container>
<container type="folder">16</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Time Capsule</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">4</container>
<container type="folder">1</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Washington North Star</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">4</container>
<container type="folder">2</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>J. &amp; J. Literary Services</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">4</container>
<container type="folder">3</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>ObserVision Group</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
</c02>
</c01>
<c01 level="series">
<did>
<unittitle>GENERAL CORRESPONDENCE</unittitle>
</did>
<scopecontent>
<p><emph render="bold">GENERAL CORRESPONDENCE, 1953-1984 (2.2 lin. ft.)</emph></p>
<p>The General Correspondence is divided into <emph render="bold">Alphabetical </emph>and <emph render="bold">Chronological </emph>files, and a <emph render="bold">Publishers and Agents </emph>subseries. The alphabetical files comprise incoming and outgoing letters with attachments. Significant correspondents include his friends and fellow African-American expatriates Maya Angelou, Herman Kofi Bailey, Sylvia Boone, William Branch, Tom Feelings, David DuBois, Preston King, Jim Lacy, Calvin and Elinor Sinnette, and Alice Windom. Other prominent correspondents in this series are John Henrik Clarke, the filmmaker Jules Dassin, Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee, James Forman, Richard Gibson, Gloria Joseph, Woodie King, Paul Mann, William Marshall, Truman Nelson, and Conor Cruise O'Brien.</p>
<p>The Maya Angelou correspondence is very personal in tone and relates to family matters, common friends, the Black Power movement and various projects. Herman Kofi Bailey discussed the development of his craft as an artist, his return to the United States in the early days of the anti-Nkrumah coup and Mayfield's influence on the development of his consciousness. He also wrote of his impressions of the &#x201C;Black Revolution,&#x201D; his conversion to Islam, and his apprenticeship with Charles White and the Hungarian master Francis de Erdely. The Sylvia Boone file includes an 18-page letter on the Ghana coup and its repercussions on the expatriate community. William Branch was a long-time friend of the author. His letters touched on his many activities in the 1970s as a successful playwright, television producer and award-winning filmmaker, and on their respective academic careers in the early 1980s. John Henrik Clarke's letters discussed his association with <emph render="italic">Freedomways, </emph>the fall of Nkrumah and politics in general. The Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee file touches on the screenplay for Mayfield's novel <emph render="italic">The Hit, </emph>the 1969 W.E.B. DuBois Centennial commemorative program, and the PBS series &#x201C;With Ossie and Ruby.&#x201D; David DuBois's letters brought news of his mother Shirley Graham DuBois in Cairo, of African-American militants in North Africa, of his own involvement in efforts to restore Nkrumah to power, and of his first novel <emph render="italic">And Bid Him Sing. </emph>The author also corresponded with Mrs. DuBois for a brief period after the Ghana coup.</p>
<p>Tom Feelings lived the expatriate experience with Mayfield in Ghana and Guyana. He wrote about his expulsion from Ghana, his first impressions of Guyana and the difficulties of resettling in the United States before and after Guyana. James Forman, one-time chairman of SNCC and author of the &#x201C;Black Manifesto&#x201D; sent pages from a diary he kept while convalescing in Puerto Rico in 1968, and wrote about forming a Frantz Fanon Society in the United States. Also included are speeches and position papers Forman wrote for SNCC and a 23-page carbon copy of a letter to Bobby Seale on SNCC and Black Panther Party relations. The Hoyt Fuller file includes a manuscript of the author's short story, &#x201C;The Most Beautiful Fishermen in the World Come from Winneba,&#x201D; and several drafts of an essay-review of Fuller's book <emph render="italic">Journey to Africa. </emph>Richard Gibson, a London-based African-American expatriate wrote about Robert Williams and the coup in Ghana, and about his own political activities in Algeria, Cuba and China. The Gloria Joseph correspondence provides a close up view of Mayfield's activities in Guyana. A specialist in elementary school guidance, Joseph also discussed her writings on black women and the feminist movement, and her efforts to launch a Third World women's publication with Johnetta Cole in the 1970s. Preston King's letters deal with personal matters related to Mayfield's departure from Ghana, his own pessimism about Africa's future, and the failure of pan-Africanism as an ideology. King is an African-American political scientist and expatriate who taught at Sheffield University in England and the University of Nairobi in Kenya. He also wrote about his book <emph render="italic">The Fear of Power </emph>and other works he edited, about his efforts to end his political exile, and about the black power movement in the United States.</p>
<p>Woodie King's file relates exclusively to his adaption of several of Mayfield's works for motion pictures or television. The Jim Lacy file contains a &#x201C;friendly review&#x201D; of Mayfield's play <emph render="italic">Fount of the Nation.</emph> The actor and director Paul Mann wrote several lengthy letters to Mayfield in 1967 and 1968 about his work, his socialist upbringing, and his association with several prominent black actors. The film project on the life of Henri Christophe is the central theme in the correspondence between Mayfield and William Marshall. The Marshall file also includes some correspondence with John Henrik Clarke on development of the script and with Sidney Poitier on the business side of the production. The author Truman Nelson credits Mayfield's 1961 review in <emph render="italic">The Nation </emph>with advancing his career after publication of his novel <emph render="italic">The Surveyor. </emph>His later correspondence with Mayfield relates to John Brown's impact on the Civil War and the Reconstruction period, and to the role of whites in a black revolution in the United States. Conor Cruise O'Brien, the &#x201C;sixth best-known living Irishman&#x201D; according to an Irish poll in the 1970s, was Vice-Chancellor of the University of Ghana during the Nkrumah years. His June 5, 1965 letter to Mayfield offers critical appreciation of the <emph render="italic">African Review </emph>and biting criticism of Consciencism or Nkrumahism. His post-Ghana letters (and Mayfield's replies) concern O'Brien's play, <emph render="italic">Murderous Angels, </emph>on the United Nations' role in the Katanga Secession in the Congo. Other O'Brien letters are located in the Academic series.</p>
<p>The Robert Slater File reflects his long friendship and sometime business partnership with Mayfield. Calvin &amp; Elinor Sinnette spent several years in Nigeria in the 1960s. Their letters to Mayfield focused on their experiences in Africa, on the killing of Ibos and the ensuing civil war in Nigeria, and on issues of incompetence and corruption among African governments. Other topics discussed include health matters in Africa and in black communities across the United States. Alice Windom's correspondence with Mayfield evenly spanned the years between 1966 and 1984. Two early reports in letter form, written in 1963 and 1964 respectively, provided detailed accounts of African-American mobilization and protest at the U.S. Embassy in Accra on the occasion of the historic 1963 March on Washington, and of Malcolm X's visit to Ghana the following year. Writing variously from Addis Ababa, Cairo, Lusaka and the United States, she discussed the aftermath of the 1966 military coup in Ghana and its repercussion on the African-American expatriate community there, political developments throughout Africa, interracial relationships and revolutionary morality among African-American activists, and the activities of mutual friends.</p>
<p>The <emph render="bold">Letters Sent </emph>subseries begins with a lone file for 1953-1954. There is a gap for the next five years which Mayfield spent in Puerto Rico, and a similar gap for 1961-1965 when the author resided in Ghana. The 1953-1954 file is very instructive in terms of Mayfield's early association and work in the theater, and his membership in the Committee for the Negro in the Arts. In a letter to his parents (1953), he shared news that his play <emph render="italic">417</emph> had been produced &#x201C;a couple of times&#x201D; that summer, and his reaction to the execution of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg. In other letters to Charles Blackwell, a theater producer, and to a partially identified friend (&#x201C;Dear Max&#x201D;), he expounded on his views on the theater and his belief that &#x201C;the next important theater in the country will be in the Negro community.&#x201D; Other letters touched on his activities at Camp Unity in Wingate, New York where he performed in <emph render="italic">Down in the Valley</emph> and directed his own play <emph render="italic">417.</emph> There are also glimpses of his living arrangement in Harlem and the difficulties blacks had in finding apartments on the Upper West Side of Manhattan unless they could find a white friend to front for them.</p>
<p>The 1960-1969 file holds a single letter for 1960, about Fidel Castro's visit to Harlem that year, and another for 1961 about Robert Williams's confrontation with the Ku Klux Klan in Monroe, South Carolina. Mayfield's letters from Ibiza, Spain (1966-1967) deal abundantly with the Ghana coup and his various writing projects. Included are letters to Nkrumah soliciting an interview, and to General J.A. Ankrah, chairman of the National Liberation Council in Ghana, soliciting Dr. T.R. Makonnen's release from detention. Makonnen was released and given seven days to leave the country. There are also various letters to publishers and literary agents regarding adaptation rights to his novels, including an unauthorized stage adaptation of his novel <emph render="italic">The Hit </emph>under the title <emph render="italic">Mr. Hubert.</emph> Mayfield clarified his relationship with Nkrumah in a reply to an unspecified review of Lewis Nkosi's book <emph render="italic">Home and Exile, </emph>which portrayed him as a &#x201C;close adviser of ex-President Nkrumah.&#x201D; &#x201C;I was never either a close or distant adviser to Dr. Nkrumah, nor a ghost writer of any of his books,&#x201D; Mayfield wrote on that occasion (Nov. 3, 1966).</p>
<p>Following his return to the U.S. in 1967, Mayfield's correspondence dealt with the production of the film <emph render="italic">Uptight,</emph> his many speaking engagements, a short film project based on Margaret Walker's poem, &#x201C;For My People,&#x201D; the 1968 conviction of Leroi Jones (Amiri Baraka) for allegedly assaulting two white guards at a Newark bank, and the author's own review-essay of Harold Cruse's book <emph render="italic">Crisis of the Negro Intellectual. </emph>The correspondence for the next three years is concerned with the production of <emph render="italic">Black Hands,</emph> his projected autobiography and an anthology of short stories by black writers, his quest for a job in 1971 as a writer-in-residence, and his subsequent relocation in Guyana. Mayfield's letters from Guyana relate mostly to efforts to secure publication of his works in the United States, and to his film project with William Marshall. In 1973, he became embroiled in a controversy around the deportation of two African-American supporters of the Guyanese opposition leader Eusi Kwayana, and wrote to Fidel Castro about the possibility of a scholarship for one of his sons in Cuba.</p>
<p>After his return to the United States in late 1974, the author's main preoccupations were with finding employment and his application to the Fulbright Commission. Letters in this subseries for the remainder of the decade relate mostly to the stage production of <emph render="italic">Fount of the Nation</emph> in 1978 and to his screenplay <emph render="italic">Jesse Mae.</emph> His Fulbright correspondence (1976-1977) in this series and the letters he wrote in the 1980s are more general in tone and content.</p>
<p>The <emph render="bold">Chronological Correspondence </emph>subseries consists of occasional letters, both incoming and outgoing. Correspondents prior to 1966 include the Puerto Rican playwright and political activist Rene Marques; Robert Sharpe who wrote the screenplay <emph render="italic">The Long Night; </emph>Gordon Lewis, a Caribbean scholar; John A. Davis, editor of AMSAC's <emph render="italic">African Forum; </emph>Bessie Herd, South African novelist; Richard Hart, one of the founders of the People's National Party in Jamaica; and the African-American journalist William Worthy. Topics discussed include the journal <emph render="italic">African Review, </emph>and film projects based on Mayfield's books. Another correspondent during that period was Kwasi Kumah, a former associate at the <emph render="italic">African Review. </emph>Occasional correspondents for that year include Ayi Kwei Armah, Alphaeus Hunton, Robert Lee and Leslie Alexander Lacy. Non-Ghana-related letters in this file relate to the production of &#x201C;Mr. Hubert&#x201D; and to Mayfield's publishing projects. Occasional correspondents over the next several years include his personal friend Ivan Spense; the Scandinavian specialist on Africa, Zdenek Cervenka; Dona Richards; the filmmaker Kay Bourne; Rosa Guy; Alice Childress; and Geoffrey Bing. The correspondence for 1968 is mostly personal in nature, with frequent references to Mayfield's acting and teaching careers. His lectures on Black Power and black writing are discussed at length over the next two years. The remaining years in the general correspondence are less substantive, though somewhat informative as to the latter part of the author's life.</p>
<p>Mayfield's <emph render="bold">Correspondence with Publishers and Agents </emph>provides many insights in the development of his work, and his efforts to get them published. Letters that relate specifically to a particular work are filed with that work in the Writings series. Ruth Aley, Mayfield's agent for many years, handled the Ghana manuscripts and most of his writings until 1975. Bart/Levy Associates handled his contract for the movie adaption of <emph render="italic">The Hit, </emph>while the Tony Ford Agency handled the property rights for <emph render="italic">The Long Night. </emph>Ronald Hobb's file includes a seven page letter from Mayfield on a proposed book dealing with issues raised in Harold Cruse's <emph render="italic">Crisis of the Negro Intellectual. </emph>Ellen Newald represented the author for his screenplays <emph render="italic">Sammy</emph> and <emph render="italic">Christophe,</emph> while another literary agent, Carol Mann, provided critical comments on the &#x201C;Gang in Suite 16&#x201D; manuscript. The entire Hill and Wang file concerns Nkrumah and his overthrow. In a letter to publisher Lawrence Hill, the author explained his reasons for leaving Ghana and some of the reasons behind the coup: &#x201C;You can't have a little revolution, a little socialism - it's like being a little pregnant.&#x201D; Paula Giddings was Mayfield's editor at Howard University Press; her correspondence in this file offers extensive comments on the proposed biography of Forbes Burnham. Finally, the Other Publishers and Agents file deals with Japanese and Czech translations of <emph render="italic">The Grand Parade </emph>and holds some correspondence with the anthologist Addison Gayle.</p>
</scopecontent>
<c02 level="subseries">
<did>
<unittitle>Alphabetical</unittitle>
</did>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">4</container>
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<unittitle>Angelou, Maya, <unitdate type="inclusive">1965-1984, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">4</container>
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<unittitle>Bailey, Herman Kofi (Shabazz), <unitdate type="inclusive">1966-1984, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">4</container>
<container type="folder">6</container>
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<unittitle>Barras, Jonetta, <unitdate type="inclusive">1980-1981</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">4</container>
<container type="folder">7</container>
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<unittitle>Berrian, Brenda, <unitdate type="inclusive">1980-1981, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">4</container>
<container type="folder">8</container>
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<unittitle>Boone, Sylvia, <unitdate type="inclusive">1966-1984, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">4</container>
<container type="folder">9</container>
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<unittitle>Branch, William, <unitdate type="inclusive">1961-1984, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">4</container>
<container type="folder">10</container>
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<unittitle>Clarke, John H., <unitdate type="inclusive">1965-1984</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">4</container>
<container type="folder">11</container>
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<unittitle>Dassin, Jules, <unitdate type="inclusive">1968-1977</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">4</container>
<container type="folder">12</container>
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<unittitle>Davis, Ossie &amp; Ruby Dee, <unitdate type="inclusive">1967-1984</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">4</container>
<container type="folder">13</container>
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<unittitle>Drake, St. Claire, <unitdate type="inclusive">1967-1976, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">4</container>
<container type="folder">14</container>
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<unittitle>Drake, Sandra, <unitdate type="inclusive">1965-1971</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">4</container>
<container type="folder">15</container>
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<unittitle>DuBois, David G., <unitdate type="inclusive">1960-1984</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">4</container>
<container type="folder">16</container>
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<unittitle>DuBois, Shirley Graham, <unitdate type="inclusive">1966-1974</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">5</container>
<container type="folder">1</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Feelings, Tom, <unitdate type="inclusive">1966-1981, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">5</container>
<container type="folder">2</container>
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<unittitle>Forman, James, <unitdate type="inclusive">1966-1969, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">5</container>
<container type="folder">3</container>
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<unittitle>Fuller, Howard L. - Malcolm X Liberation University, <unitdate>1969</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">5</container>
<container type="folder">4</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Fuller, Hoyt, <unitdate type="inclusive">1967-1978, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">5</container>
<container type="folder">5</container>
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<unittitle>Gayle, Addison, <unitdate>1968</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">5</container>
<container type="folder">6</container>
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<unittitle>Gibson, Richard, <unitdate type="inclusive">1965-1968</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">5</container>
<container type="folder">7</container>
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<unittitle>Giovanni, Nikki, <unitdate>1970</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
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<c03 level="subseries">
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<container type="box">5</container>
<container type="folder">8</container>
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<unittitle>Goodrich, Andrew, <unitdate type="inclusive">1977-1978</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
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<container type="box">5</container>
<container type="folder">9</container>
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<unittitle>Graham, Lorenz, <unitdate>1970's</unitdate></unittitle>
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<unittitle>Haley, Alex, <unitdate type="inclusive">1968-1971</unitdate></unittitle>
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<container type="box">5</container>
<container type="folder">11</container>
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<unittitle>Henderson, Stephen, <unitdate type="inclusive">1976-1983</unitdate></unittitle>
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<container type="box">5</container>
<container type="folder">12</container>
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<unittitle>Hercules, Frank, <unitdate type="inclusive">1968-1974</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
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<c03 level="subseries">
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<container type="box">5</container>
<container type="folder">13</container>
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<unittitle>Johnson, Jan, <unitdate type="inclusive">1975-1976</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
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<container type="box">5</container>
<container type="folder">14</container>
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<unittitle>Jones, Lynette, <unitdate type="inclusive">1969-1971, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">5</container>
<container type="folder">15</container>
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<unittitle>Jones, Patricia, <unitdate>1981, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
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<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">5</container>
<container type="folder">16</container>
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<unittitle>Joseph, Gloria, <unitdate type="inclusive">1968-1981, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
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<container type="box">6</container>
<container type="folder">1</container>
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<unittitle>Kilson, Martin, <unitdate type="inclusive">1966-1967, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
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<container type="box">6</container>
<container type="folder">2</container>
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<unittitle>King, Preston, <unitdate type="inclusive">1965-1973, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">6</container>
<container type="folder">3</container>
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<unittitle>King, Woodie, <unitdate type="inclusive">1970-1984, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">6</container>
<container type="folder">4</container>
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<unittitle>Lacy, Jim, <unitdate type="inclusive">1978-1984</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
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<container type="box">6</container>
<container type="folder">5</container>
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<unittitle>Mallory, Mae, <unitdate type="inclusive">1969-1977</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
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<container type="box">6</container>
<container type="folder">6</container>
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<unittitle>Mann, Paul, <unitdate type="inclusive">1958-1968</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
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<container type="box">6</container>
<container type="folder">7</container>
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<unittitle>Marshall, Paul, <unitdate>1970, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">6</container>
<container type="folder">8</container>
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<unittitle>Marshall, William, <unitdate type="inclusive">1972-1975, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
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<container type="box">6</container>
<container type="folder">9</container>
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<unittitle>Mitchell, Loften, <unitdate type="inclusive">1969-1981</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
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<container type="box">6</container>
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<unittitle>Neal, Evelyn, <unitdate>1981, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">6</container>
<container type="folder">11</container>
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<unittitle>Nelson, Truman, <unitdate type="inclusive">1967-1977, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
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<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">6</container>
<container type="folder">12</container>
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<unittitle>O'Brien, Conor Cruise, <unitdate type="inclusive">1966-1969, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
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<c03 level="subseries">
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<container type="box">6</container>
<container type="folder">13</container>
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<unittitle>Okpaku, Joseph, <unitdate>1975, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">6</container>
<container type="folder">14</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Peters, Dixie, <unitdate type="inclusive">1975-1980</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">6</container>
<container type="folder">15</container>
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<unittitle>Poitier, Sidney, <unitdate type="inclusive">1978-1983</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">6</container>
<container type="folder">16</container>
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<unittitle>Schlafer, Leonard, <unitdate type="inclusive">1980-1981</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">6</container>
<container type="folder">17</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Sinette, Calvin &amp; Elinor, <unitdate type="inclusive">1965-1983,</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">6</container>
<container type="folder">18</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Slater, Robert, <unitdate type="inclusive">1965-1981, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">6</container>
<container type="folder">19</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Walton, Ola, <unitdate type="inclusive">1965-1972, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">6</container>
<container type="folder">20</container>
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<unittitle>Williams, Robert F., <unitdate type="inclusive">1978-1981</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03 level="subseries">
<did>
<container type="box">6</container>
<container type="folder">21</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Windom, Alice, <unitdate type="inclusive">1954-1984, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
</c02>
<c02 level="subseries">
<did>
<unittitle>Letters Sent</unittitle>
</did>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">7</container>
<container type="folder">1</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><unitdate>1950's</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">7</container>
<container type="folder">2</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive">1960-1969</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">7</container>
<container type="folder">3</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive">1970-1975</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">7</container>
<container type="folder">4</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive">1974-1984</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">7</container>
<container type="folder">5</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
</c02>
<c02 level="subseries">
<did>
<unittitle>Chronological</unittitle>
</did>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">7</container>
<container type="folder">6</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><unitdate>1950's</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">7</container>
<container type="folder">7</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive">1960-1965</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">7</container>
<container type="folder">8</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><unitdate>1966</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">7</container>
<container type="folder">9</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><unitdate>1967</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">7</container>
<container type="folder">10</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><unitdate>1968</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">7</container>
<container type="folder">11</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><unitdate>1969</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">8</container>
<container type="folder">1</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive">1970-1971</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">8</container>
<container type="folder">2</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive">1972-1975</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">8</container>
<container type="folder">3</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive">1976-1979</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">8</container>
<container type="folder">4</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive">1980-1983</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">8</container>
<container type="folder">5</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><unitdate>1984</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">8</container>
<container type="folder">6</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
</c02>
<c02 level="subseries">
<did>
<unittitle>Publishers and Agents</unittitle>
</did>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">8</container>
<container type="folder">7</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Ruth Aley, <unitdate type="inclusive">1966-1977, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">8</container>
<container type="folder">8</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Bart/Levy Assoc.</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">8</container>
<container type="folder">9</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Tony Ford Agency</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">8</container>
<container type="folder">10</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Lorrie Helton</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">8</container>
<container type="folder">11</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Lawrence Hill</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">9</container>
<container type="folder">1</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Ronald Hobbs, <unitdate type="inclusive">1967-1968</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">9</container>
<container type="folder">2</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Howard University Press</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">9</container>
<container type="folder">3</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Carol Mann</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">9</container>
<container type="folder">4</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>The Nation</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">9</container>
<container type="folder">5</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Ellen Newald, Inc.</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">9</container>
<container type="folder">6</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Random House</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">9</container>
<container type="folder">7</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Vanguard Press</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">9</container>
<container type="folder">8</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Others</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
</c02>
</c01>
<c01 level="series">
<did>
<unittitle>WRITINGS</unittitle>
</did>
<scopecontent>
<p><emph render="bold">WRITINGS, 1951-1984 (6.2 lin. ft.)</emph></p>
<p>The Writings series is divided into the following categories: <emph render="bold">Novels, Short Stories, Ghana and Guyana Manuscripts, Play Scripts, Radio Scripts, Screenplays, Articles and Essays, Conferences and Speeches, </emph>and <emph render="bold">Other Authors. </emph>Materials within each subseries are arranged chronologically. Mayfield's writings prior to 1966, published and unpublished, are for the most part not present this collection. The manuscripts for his first two novels, the plays and essays he wrote in the 1950s, his articles published in Puerto Rico and Ghana were reputedly destroyed during the Ghana coup.</p>
<p>The <emph render="bold">Novels </emph>subseries begins with separate files of correspondence and reviews for Mayfield's first two published works, <emph render="italic">The Hit </emph>and <emph render="italic">The Long Night. </emph>A complete typescript of <emph render="italic">The Grand Parade, </emph>with editorial suggestions and author's corrections and additions, is included here. The author's novel of Broadway and Harlem life completed in 1963 was first entitled &#x201C;Those Were the Days&#x201D; and later &#x201C;Look Pretty for the People.&#x201D; Typescripts of both versions are present in this series. &#x201C;Death at Karamu,&#x201D; an unpublished detective novel begun in Ghana and completed in Spain, includes the author's handwritten first draft in a spiral notebook, a second draft with author's corrections and additions and the complete version of a third draft sent to his agent. The manuscript for the author's latter novels of suspense and college life are for the most part present in the collection. Included in these files are synopses and drafts, revisions and outlines, and correspondence.</p>
<p>Mayfield's <emph render="bold">Short Stories </emph>are filed together alphabetically, except where multiple drafts or correspondence and other attachments justify an individual folder. The oldest short story in the collection, &#x201C;The Last Days of Duncan Street&#x201D; was rejected by the <emph render="italic">New Yorker </emph>magazine but was published in Spanish in the Cuban literary magazine <emph render="italic">Calle de Revolucion. </emph>This is followed by several files of story ideas, notes, book projects and fragments, some dating from the last months of the author's life. The &#x201C;Black Abolitionists&#x201D; folder includes detailed outlines of a juvenile history trilogy on the anti-slavery movement and a 47-page treatment of a volume on &#x201C;Black Men in the Civil War.&#x201D;</p>
<p>The <emph render="bold">Ghana and Guyana Manuscripts </emph>begin with &#x201C;The Living Ghana,&#x201D; a joint unfinished project for a reader on modern Ghana. A detailed outline of that work and what appear to be several completed chapters on agriculture, labor, infrastructure, politics, and foreign policy are located here. The Correspondence file for Mayfield's next Ghana project. &#x201C;The Lonely Warrior&#x201D; includes letters to and from John Henrik Clarke, St. Clair Drake, and the publisher Angus Cameron. A first and second draft of this manuscript, along with comments, revisions and additions are filed here, as well as the complete text of the author's latter rewrite of the book under the title &#x201C;When Ghana Was Ghana.&#x201D; The &#x201C;Tales of the Lido&#x201D; manuscript is complemented by detailed grant proposals submitted in 1981 to the Guggenheim Memorial Fund and the Ford Foundation. These files offer further biographical details on the author's life. The <emph render="italic">Burnham Biography </emph>includes several corrected drafts and the final manuscript submitted to Howard University Press. There are also several letters in these files to Forbes Burnham, one of them outlining the book project and raising several questions for the Prime Minister to answer later in a face to face interview. The surviving chapters of Mayfield's autobiography are also located here.</p>
<p>The <emph render="bold">Play Scripts </emph>subseries includes the one-act play &amp;<emph render="italic">The Other Foot,</emph> <emph render="italic">Alberta,</emph> a comedy in three acts written by Mayfield in 1952, and a mimeographed copy of the one-act play <emph render="italic">417.</emph> There are several drafts of <emph render="italic">Fount of the Nation,</emph> complete with author's notes, revisions, correspondence, and reviews. This section is complemented by several unfinished scripts, including a projected prose drama based on the life of David Walker and <emph render="italic">Ballet of the Reconstruction,</emph> a program of gospel music and dance. Also included are several radio scripts, among them &#x201C;Black Men at War&#x201D; written for the Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee Story Hour (1975); and &#x201C;News Talks,&#x201D; a sample of the radio commentaries Mayfield wrote for Ghanaian radio in 1963.</p>
<p>The <emph render="bold">Screenplays </emph>subseries includes works for both movies and television. The <emph render="italic">Uptight</emph> files consist of a first draft entitled &#x201C;Betrayal&#x201D; prepared by Jules Dassin; the second draft written by Mayfield, Dassin and Ruby Dee; correspondence between Mayfield's agent Lily Veidt, Dassin and Paramount Pictures; and publicity materials. <emph render="italic">Child of Anger,</emph> otherwise entitled <emph render="italic">Mr. Vance</emph> or <emph render="italic">The Bradley Arms</emph> is an unfinished screenplay written in 1968 on growing up black in Harlem. The <emph render="italic">Christophe</emph> files comprise annotated drafts, revisions and additions, research notes, plot development materials, correspondence with William and Sylvia Marshall, and an earlier adaptation by Marshall and Sylvia Gussin. Mayfield's screenplay <emph render="italic">The Long Night</emph> based on his novel by the same title and Ron Milner's adaptation of <emph render="italic">The Hit </emph>can also be found here. <emph render="italic">Jessie Mae,</emph> Mayfield's last finished screenplay was completed during his residency in Germany. His television work comprises &#x201C;Black Drama,&#x201D; a narrative on the Harlem Renaissance he wrote for the CBS-TV &#x201C;Black Heritage&#x201D; series, and several scripts prepared for Educational Audio Visual Inc. between 1969 and 1982.</p>
<p>Mayfield's <emph render="bold">Articles and Essays </emph>are grouped together in an A-Z file, except where the bulk or the number of attachments warranted an individual file. Book reviews and related correspondence are filed separately. The A-Z file includes the author's major essay &#x201C;On Revolutionary Nationalism&#x201D; written in 1968, a mimeographed copy of &#x201C;You Touch My Black Aesthetic and I'll Touch Yours,&#x201D; &#x201C;And Then Came Baldwin&#x201D; published in the Spring 1963 issue of <emph render="italic">Freedomways, </emph>an article on African-American involvement in the Congo published in <emph render="italic">Muhammad Speaks </emph>(1965), an unfinished essay entitled &#x201C;A United States of Africa, Pipe Dream or Possible,&#x201D; and photocopies of articles published in Ghana and Guyana. The author's <emph render="bold">Speaking Engagements </emph>are represented with handwritten notes, correspondence, printed matter and several drafts of a conference paper, &#x201C;The Great Disturber of the Peace: DuBois as Progenitor of Negritude&#x201D; (1980). Other lecture notes are located in the Academic series.</p>
<p>Also located in the Writings series are manuscripts and correspondence from authors whose works are published in the anthology of short stories edited by Mayfield in 1971. The <emph render="italic">Ten Times Black </emph>correspondence file includes writers Hank Gay, Etheridge Knight, Sam Greenlee, and editors at Bantam Books. Works by <emph render="bold">Other Authors </emph>include Hank Gay's novel <title render="italic" actuate="onrequest">The Well</title> and Gloria Joseph's <title render="italic" actuate="onrequest">Black Challenge to the White Campus: the Black Student's Handbook.</title> Also included are various drafts of Joan Cambridge's autobiographical novel, <title render="italic" actuate="onrequest">Show Me the Way to Stay Home.</title></p>
</scopecontent>
<c02 level="subseries">
<did>
<unittitle>Novels</unittitle>
</did>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">10</container>
<container type="folder">1</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">The Hit</emph> - Correspondence &amp; Reviews</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">10</container>
<container type="folder">2</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">The Long Night</emph> - Notices and Reviews</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>&#x201C;The Grand Parade&#x201D;</unittitle>
</did>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">10</container>
<container type="folder">3</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>p. 1-220</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">10</container>
<container type="folder">4</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>p. 221-479</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">10</container>
<container type="folder">5</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Notices and Reviews</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>&#x201C;Death At Karamu&#x201D;</unittitle>
</did>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">10</container>
<container type="folder">6</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>First Draft</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>Second Draft</unittitle>
</did>
<c05>
<did>
<container type="box">10</container>
<container type="folder">7</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>pp. 1-124</unittitle>
</did>
</c05>
<c05>
<did>
<container type="box">10</container>
<container type="folder">8</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>pp. 127- End</unittitle>
</did>
</c05>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">11</container>
<container type="folder">1</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Third Draft</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>&#x201C;Look Pretty For the People&#x201D;</unittitle>
</did>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">11</container>
<container type="folder">2</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>pp. 1-249</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">11</container>
<container type="folder">3</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>pp. 250-342</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">11</container>
<container type="folder">4</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>&#x201C;Dialogue Between Jason Grant and Mr. Weinbecker&#x201D;</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">11</container>
<container type="folder">5</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>&#x201C;Those Were The Days&#x201D;</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>&#x201C;The Gang In Suite Sixteen&#x201D;</unittitle>
</did>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">11</container>
<container type="folder">6</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Early Development and Conceptualization</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">11</container>
<container type="folder">7</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Synopsis &amp; Revision</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">11</container>
<container type="folder">8</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Correspondence</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">11</container>
<container type="folder">9</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>First Draft</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">12</container>
<container type="folder">1</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Second Draft</unittitle>
</did>
<c05>
<did>
<container type="box">12</container>
<container type="folder">2</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Revised, pp. 1-104</unittitle>
</did>
</c05>
<c05>
<did>
<container type="box">12</container>
<container type="folder">3</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>pp. 105-217</unittitle>
</did>
</c05>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">12</container>
<container type="folder">4</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Crap Shooting Scene</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>&#x201C;Run Into The Wind&#x201D;</unittitle>
</did>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">12</container>
<container type="folder">5</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Synopsis, Revision, and First Draft</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">12</container>
<container type="folder">6</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Second Draft - Revised</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">12</container>
<container type="folder">7</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>&#x201C;A Quiet Rage At College Park&#x201D;</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">12</container>
<container type="folder">8</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>&#x201C;The College Park Murders&#x201D;</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">12</container>
<container type="folder">9</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>&#x201C;The Hanover Hit&#x201D; - Synopsis</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">12</container>
<container type="folder">10</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>&#x201C;The Conference&#x201D; - Chapter I</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">12</container>
<container type="folder">11</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>&#x201C;The Committee&#x201D;</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">12</container>
<container type="folder">12</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>&#x201C;A Change of Grades&#x201D; (Outline)</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">12</container>
<container type="folder">13</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Printed Matter</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
</c02>
<c02 level="subseries">
<did>
<unittitle>Short Stories</unittitle>
</did>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">13</container>
<container type="folder">1</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>A-C</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">13</container>
<container type="folder">2</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>&#x201C;All the Goodbye People,&#x201D; pp. 1-49</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">13</container>
<container type="folder">3</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>&#x201C;Black On Black&#x201D;</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">13</container>
<container type="folder">4</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>L-N</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">13</container>
<container type="folder">5</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>O-T</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">13</container>
<container type="folder">6</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>&#x201C;Washington Then and Now&#x201D;</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Book Projects</unittitle>
</did>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">13</container>
<container type="folder">7</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Stories, Ideas and Notes</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">13</container>
<container type="folder">8</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Last Book Idea, <unitdate>1984</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">13</container>
<container type="folder">9</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>&#x201C;The Black Abolitionists&#x201D;</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">13</container>
<container type="folder">10</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Notes and Fragments</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">13</container>
<container type="folder">11</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Assorted Writings - Fragments</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">13</container>
<container type="folder">12</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Early Writings, <unitdate>1945 </unitdate>(?)</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
</c02>
<c02 level="subseries">
<did>
<unittitle>Ghana and Guyana Manuscripts</unittitle>
</did>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">13</container>
<container type="folder">13</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>&#x201C;The Living Ghana&#x201D;</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">13</container>
<container type="folder">14</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>&#x201C;Ghana in Perspective&#x201D;</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>&#x201C;The Lonely Warrior&#x201D;</unittitle>
</did>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">13</container>
<container type="folder">15</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>First Draft</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">13</container>
<container type="folder">16</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Correspondence</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">13</container>
<container type="folder">17</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Second Draft - Incomplete with Revisions</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">14</container>
<container type="folder">1</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Second Draft - Complete</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">14</container>
<container type="folder">2</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Rabinowitz Foundation - Grant Application</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">14</container>
<container type="folder">3</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Comments, Revisions and Additions</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">14</container>
<container type="folder">4</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Comments by St. Clair Drake</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>&#x201C;When Ghana Was Ghana&#x201D;</unittitle>
</did>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">14</container>
<container type="folder">5</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>First Draft - Incomplete</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">14</container>
<container type="folder">6</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Corrected Pages</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">14</container>
<container type="folder">7</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Index</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>&#x201C;Tales of the Lido&#x201D;</unittitle>
</did>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">14</container>
<container type="folder">8</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Introductions, Notes</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">14</container>
<container type="folder">9</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Preface and Forethought</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">14</container>
<container type="folder">10</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>First Completed Draft</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">14</container>
<container type="folder">11</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Second Completed Draft</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">14</container>
<container type="folder">12</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Completed Chapters</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">15</container>
<container type="folder">1</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Later Revisions and Rewrites</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">15</container>
<container type="folder">2</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Guggenheim Fellowship Application</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">15</container>
<container type="folder">3</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Ford Foundation Application</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>&#x201C;Burnham of Guyana&#x201D;</unittitle>
</did>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">15</container>
<container type="folder">4</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Notes and Correspondence</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">15</container>
<container type="folder">5</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Early Draft</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">15</container>
<container type="folder">6-7</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Revisions &amp; Additions</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">15</container>
<container type="folder">8</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Complete Version</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">15</container>
<container type="folder">9</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Autobiography</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
</c02>
<c02 level="subseries">
<did>
<unittitle>Play Scripts</unittitle>
</did>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">16</container>
<container type="folder">1</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">The Other Foot</emph></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">16</container>
<container type="folder">2</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">Alberta, A Play In Three Acts</emph></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">16</container>
<container type="folder">3</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">417</emph>, <emph render="italic">The Hit</emph></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">Fount of The Nation</emph></unittitle>
</did>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">16</container>
<container type="folder">4</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>First Draft</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">16</container>
<container type="folder">5</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Second Draft</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">16</container>
<container type="folder">6</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Third Draft</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">16</container>
<container type="folder">7</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Fourth Draft</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">16</container>
<container type="folder">8</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Fourth Draft - Author's Copy</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">16</container>
<container type="folder">9</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Fourth Draft - Revisions</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">16</container>
<container type="folder">10</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Narrative and Printed Matter</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">16</container>
<container type="folder">11</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">Rum Face</emph> - Final Script</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">Black Hands</emph></unittitle>
</did>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">17</container>
<container type="folder">1-2</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Manuscripts and Typescript</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">17</container>
<container type="folder">3</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Correspondence and Printed Matter</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">17</container>
<container type="folder">4</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">Three Cheers for Abe</emph></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">17</container>
<container type="folder">5</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">Ring Four Times Sharp</emph></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">17</container>
<container type="folder">6</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">David Walker's Appeal: A Time that Made Men Mad</emph></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">17</container>
<container type="folder">7</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">Ballet of the Reconstruction</emph></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
</c02>
<c02 level="subseries">
<did>
<unittitle>Radio Scripts</unittitle>
</did>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">17</container>
<container type="folder">8</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">News Talk (Ghana)</emph></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">17</container>
<container type="folder">9</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">Black Men at War</emph></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">17</container>
<container type="folder">10</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">Black Diary</emph></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">17</container>
<container type="folder">11</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">Painting with Words</emph></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
</c02>
<c02 level="subseries">
<did>
<unittitle>Screenplays</unittitle>
</did>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">Up Tight</emph></unittitle>
</did>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">17</container>
<container type="folder">12</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>First Draft</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">18</container>
<container type="folder">1</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Second Draft</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">18</container>
<container type="folder">2</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Correspondence</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">18</container>
<container type="folder">3-4</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Reviews</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">18</container>
<container type="folder">5</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Publicity Materials</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">Child of Anger</emph></unittitle>
</did>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">18</container>
<container type="folder">6</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Synopsis and Scene Outlines</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">18</container>
<container type="folder">7</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">Mr. Vance</emph> or <emph render="italic">The Bradley Arms</emph></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">Christophe of Haiti</emph></unittitle>
</did>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">18</container>
<container type="folder">8</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Correspondence, Outlines and Notes</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">18</container>
<container type="folder">9</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Proposal and Treatment</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">19</container>
<container type="folder">1</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>First Draft</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">19</container>
<container type="folder">2</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Second Draft</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">19</container>
<container type="folder">3</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Revisions, Additions</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">19</container>
<container type="folder">4</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Research Materials</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">19</container>
<container type="folder">5</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">The Tragedy of King Christophe,</emph> by William Marshall and Sylvia Gussin</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">19</container>
<container type="folder">6-7</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">The Long Night</emph></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">19</container>
<container type="folder">8</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">The Hit,</emph> by Ron Milner</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">19</container>
<container type="folder">9</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">If the Sidewalk Could Talk</emph></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">Jessie Mae</emph></unittitle>
</did>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">20</container>
<container type="folder">1</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>pp. 1-155</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">20</container>
<container type="folder">2</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>pp. 156-290</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">20</container>
<container type="folder">3</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">Jessie Mae,</emph> <unitdate>1976</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">20</container>
<container type="folder">4</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>CBS-TV <emph render="italic">Black Heritage</emph> Series (Mayfield Episodes)</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Educational Audio Visual Inc.</unittitle>
</did>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">20</container>
<container type="folder">5</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Correspondence</unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<container type="box">20</container>
<container type="folder">6</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>EAV Outlines on Black History, <unitdate>1969</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c04>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">20</container>
<container type="folder">7</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">Black Protest,</emph> <unitdate>1969</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">20</container>
<container type="folder">8</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">Black History</emph></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">20</container>
<container type="folder">9</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">The Black Man in the American Revolution</emph> - Proposal</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">20</container>
<container type="folder">10</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">Melville, in Pursuit of His Work</emph></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">21</container>
<container type="folder">1</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">The Odyssey of W.E.B. DuBois,</emph> <unitdate>1969</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">21</container>
<container type="folder">2</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">My Soul Has Grown Deep Like the River,</emph> Richard Barthe</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">21</container>
<container type="folder">3</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">Why Die</emph> - Synopsis</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">21</container>
<container type="folder">4</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">Yes Indeed,</emph> with Joan Cambridge</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
</c02>
<c02 level="subseries">
<did>
<unittitle>Articles and Essays</unittitle>
</did>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">21</container>
<container type="folder">5</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>A-Z</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">21</container>
<container type="folder">6</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>&#x201C;Ghana Articles,&#x201D; <unitdate type="inclusive">1961-1965</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">21</container>
<container type="folder">7</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle><emph render="italic">The African Review - </emph>Mayfield's Editorials, <unitdate type="inclusive">1963-1965</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">21</container>
<container type="folder">8</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>&#x201C;Challenge to Negro Leadership&#x201D; - <emph render="italic">Commentary, </emph><unitdate>April 1961</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">21</container>
<container type="folder">9</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>&#x201C;Crisis or Crusade&#x201D; - A Review of Harold Cruse's <emph render="italic">Crisis..., </emph><unitdate>1968</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">21</container>
<container type="folder">10</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>&#x201C;Notes on the Reconstruction Era and P.B.S. Pinchback,&#x201D; <unitdate>1975</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">21</container>
<container type="folder">11</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>&#x201C;The Foolish Consistency of Saunders Redding,&#x201D; <unitdate>1979</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">21</container>
<container type="folder">12</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>&#x201C;Lorraine Hansberry: A Woman for All Seasons&#x201D; (<emph render="italic">Freedomways, </emph><unitdate>1979)</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">21</container>
<container type="folder">13</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>&#x201C;Langston Hughes: Harlem and Beyond&#x201D; (Book Review, <unitdate>1983)</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">21</container>
<container type="folder">14</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Jessie Jackson Articles, <unitdate>1984</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">22</container>
<container type="folder">1</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Frank Silvera Obituary - <emph render="italic">New York Times, </emph><unitdate>1970</unitdate></unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">22</container>
<container type="folder">2</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Letters to the Editor</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">22</container>
<container type="folder">3</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Book Reviews</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">22</container>
<container type="folder">4</container>
<container type="reel"></container>
<unittitle>Theatre Reviews</unittitle>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<container type="box">22</container>
<container type="folder">5</container>
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