Achievement1910· literature
Charles Chesnutt's Fiction Legacy Recognized in Black Literary Culture
Charles Chesnutt, who had been the most prominent Black fiction writer of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, largely retired from writing after his novel 'The Colonel's Dream' (1905) was poorly received. In the 1910s his earlier works were rediscovered and discussed by Black intellectuals as foundational to African American literature, influencing younger Harlem Renaissance writers.