There's a re-printing of this I picked up through one of those places I really shouldn't be buying from.
It's only a wee journal but it's full of stuff that's of not-just-historical interest - writing which occupies a particular time and place. And critically, blackness. I read of this journal in an article on the so-called n_____ati, a diverse group of young, black, politically engaged writers. So we get a range of what may be considered experimental works - whether in terms of Richard Bruce's grammatically loose work, each clause kind of stapled together with ellipses, or in terms of a really acute excision of a piece about colorism and sexism by Zora Neale Hurston (who I've shamefully never read - must rectify this).
Sometimes journals of 'historical interest' are paralysed by their time and context but this for me does what a journal should do - present a range of voices and styles and giving them a limited space to show off their wares. The 'historical interest' perhaps comes from exposing narratives that weren't massive at the time (and are barely much larger now) - say black women's experiences, black sexuality (including queer sexualities), colourism, literary theory. But for the 'shock of the new' this might've carried a century ago, it now appears to me as a solid and fleeting collection of young, fired up writers who are very much establishing their own voices.