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  1. Frank Marshall Davis (December 31, 1905 – July 26, 1987) was an American journalist, poet, political and labor movement activist, and businessman. Davis began his career writing for African American newspapers in Chicago.

  2. President Obama met Frank Marshall Davis four decades ago and saw Davis 10 to 15 times as a teenager.

  3. Aug 20, 2012 · In the 1970s, amid this dangerous political theater, Frank Marshall Davis came into Barack Obama's life.Aided by access to explosive declassified FBI files, Soviet archives, and Davis's original newspaper columns, Paul Kengor explores how Obama sought out Davis and how Davis found in Obama an impressionable young man, one susceptible to Davis's ...

    • Paul Kengor Ph.D.
  4. Oct 10, 2007 · Frank Marshall Davis rose to prominence as a poet and journalist during the Depression and the Second World War. Prior to his departure for the Territory of Hawaii in 1948, he found himself the subject of adulation by many readers but also the target of careful scrutiny by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the House Un-American Activities ...

  5. Aided by access to explosive declassified FBI files, Soviet archives, and Davis's original newspaper columns, Paul Kengor explores how Obama sought out Davis and how Davis found in Obama an impressionable young man, one susceptible to Davis's worldview that opposed American policy and traditional values while praising communist regimes.

  6. Frank Marshall Davis. 1905–1987. Frank Marshall Davis's poetry "not only questioned social ills in his own time but also inspired Blacks in the politically charged 1960s," according to John Edgar Tidwell in the Dictionary of Literary Biography.

  7. Frank Marshall Davis - The Academy of American Poets is the largest membership-based nonprofit organization fostering an appreciation for contemporary poetry and supporting American poets. Born in 1905 in Arkansas City, poet Frank Marshall Davis used his poetry to critique racism

  8. The speaker in his “ Frank Marshall Davis: Writer ” declared: I was a weaver of jagged words. A warbler of garbled tunes. A singer of savage songs.

  9. Frank Marshall Davis distinguished himself as a top poet and journalist during the 1930s and 40s, and produced a considerable body of work that influenced generations of poets. He worked at a series of newspapers, including as executive editor of the labor weekly Chicago Star, which he co-founded.

  10. In the 1930s and 1940s, when the formal criticism of blues and jazz was emerging, Davis used his ANP columns to shape African American cultural taste by rating the new swing or “hot jazz” records as they appeared. By the mid-1950s, black music criticism had become more systematic,...

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