“A WAY OUT OF NO WAY” A NOTE ON THE BACKGROUND OF THE AFRICAN AMERICAN PROVERBIAL SAYING

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Charles Clay Doyle

Résumé

The proverbial phrase “make a way out of no way,” common in the rhetoric of Martin Luther King and other African American writers and speakers in the twentieth century, was anticipated by very similar expressions among nineteenth-century Quakers—and before that by a sixteenth century Protestant Reformer.

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Doyle, C. C. « “A WAY OUT OF NO WAY”: A NOTE ON THE BACKGROUND OF THE AFRICAN AMERICAN PROVERBIAL SAYING ». Proverbium, vol. 31, août 2014, p. 193-198, https://naklada.ffos.hr/casopisi/index.php/proverbium/article/view/697.

Références

Calvin, John. 1557. In librum Psalmorum, Ioannis Caluini commentarius. [Geneva:] Robert Estienne.

Calvin, John. 1571. Commentaries on the Bible: The Psalmes of David and Others. Translated by Arthur Golding. London: Thomas East and Henry Middleton.

Calvin, John. 1840. Commentary on the Psalms of David. London: Thomas Tegg. Thomas Godwin. 1878. Autobiography and Letters. Edited by Ann Godwin. London: J. Gadsby.

Hart, Stephen. 1846. Poems. 2nd ed. Fall River MA: Almy & Milne (printers). King, Martin Luther, Jr. 1992-2007. Papers. 6 vols. Edited by Clayborne Carson, et al. Berkeley: U of California P.

Mieder, Wolfgang. 2010. “Making a Way out of No Way”: Martin Luther King’sSermonic Proverbial Rhetoric. New York: Peter Lang.

Young, Andrew. 1994. A Way out of No Way: The Spiritual Memoirs of Andrew Young. Nashville TN: Thomas Nelson