"Looney's trailblazing book opens a new and important page in Dante Studies and African American Studies, as well as American Studies at large. Thanks to this solid research, scholars of these fields will now look at each other's works with a growing sense of commonality." —Symposium"Dennis Looney examines the influence and reception of Dante's Commedia in African American literature and film from the late 1920s to the present. . . . This is primarily a study of black American literature, but it does offer a fascinating insight into the importance of Dante as a lens through which to read these texts, and a figure in the African American cultural imagination." —Medium Aevum"Both for the scholarship it offers and for the work it urges others to do, Dennis Looney's Freedom Readers is a crucial contribution to African American studies, to American studies more broadly, and to the continuing saga of Dante's reception. . . . Freedom Readers will . . . have a powerful influence in American literary studies for some years to come." —Renaissance Quarterly"[Dennis Looney's] subject of Dante's African American reception has been somewhat neglected up to now, but offers some striking evidence of his relevance to the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Looney's major focus is on the novels Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison and The System of Dante's Hell by LeRoi Jones (later known as Amiri Baraka), both at various levels autobiographical; he also covers a wide range of writing, and some film, from the 1860s to Toni Morrison and contemporary rap music." —Times Literary Supplement