"Barbara Foley has written a brilliant book on Toomer. I would go so far to say it is also the best researched book on Toomer that exists. . . . She illuminates Toomer's Cane in profound and lasting ways."--Charles Scruggs, co-author of Jean Toomer and the Terrors of American History"All scholars researching the canonized texts of the Harlem Renaissance should read and critically align this study with other historical and cultural work discussing the period. Recommended."--Choice "An indispensable book for Toomer scholars and a heavyweight assessment of the politics of the Harlem Renaissance."--Journal of American Studies"Barbara Foley's contribution to Toomer studies newly places him in the contexts of both early twentieth-century Left politics and 'New Negro' sensibility. Any assessment of the Harlem Renaissance is made all the richer by Foley's study, with which subsequent scholarship must contend."--Nathan Grant, author of Masculinist Impulses: Toomer, Hurston, Black Writing, and Modernity