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  1. Racial Innocence
    Performing American Childhood from Slavery to Civil Rights
    Erschienen: [2011]; © 2011
    Verlag:  New York University Press, New York, NY

    2013 Book Award Winner from the International Research Society in Children's Literature2012 Outstanding Book Award Winner from the Association for Theatre in Higher Education 2012 Winner of the Lois P. Rudnick Book Prize presented by the New England... mehr

    Brandenburgische Technische Universität Cottbus - Senftenberg, Universitätsbibliothek
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    2013 Book Award Winner from the International Research Society in Children's Literature2012 Outstanding Book Award Winner from the Association for Theatre in Higher Education 2012 Winner of the Lois P. Rudnick Book Prize presented by the New England American Studies Association 2012 Runner-Up, John Hope Franklin Publication Prize presented by the American Studies Association2012 Honorable Mention, Distinguished Book Award presented by the Society for the Study of American Women WritersPart of the American Literatures Initiative Series Beginning in the mid nineteenth century in America, childhood became synonymous with innocence—a reversal of the previously-dominant Calvinist belief that children were depraved, sinful creatures. As the idea of childhood innocence took hold, it became racialized: popular culture constructed white children as innocent and vulnerable while excluding black youth from these qualities. Actors, writers, and visual artists then began pairing white children with African American adults and children, thus transferring the quality of innocence to a variety of racial-political projects—a dynamic that Robin Bernstein calls "racial innocence." This phenomenon informed racial formation from the mid nineteenth century through the early twentieth. Racial Innocence takes up a rich archive including books, toys, theatrical props, and domestic knickknacks which Bernstein analyzes as "scriptive things" that invite or prompt historically-located practices while allowing for resistance and social improvisation. Integrating performance studies with literary and visual analysis, Bernstein offers singular readings of theatrical productions from blackface minstrelsy to Uncle Tom’s Cabin to The Wonderful Wizard of Oz; literary works by Joel Chandler Harris, Harriet Wilson, and Frances Hodgson Burnett; material culture including Topsy pincushions, Uncle Tom and Little Eva handkerchiefs, and Raggedy Ann dolls; and visual texts ranging from fine portraiture to advertisements for lard substitute. Throughout, Bernstein shows how "innocence" gradually became the exclusive province of white children—until the Civil Rights Movement succeeded not only in legally desegregating public spaces, but in culturally desegregating the concept of childhood itself.Check out the author's blog for the book here

     

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    Sprache: Englisch
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    ISBN: 9780814787090
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    Schriftenreihe: America and the Long 19th Century ; 16
    Schlagworte: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / African American Studies; Children in literature; Racism in literature; Slavery; Slavery; Rassismus; Kind <Motiv>; Kultur; Literatur
    Umfang: 1 online resource
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    Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 08. Jun 2020)

  2. What Was African American Literature?
    Erschienen: [2022]
    Verlag:  Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA

    Frontmatter -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- 1. Historicizing African American Literature -- 2. Particularity and the Problem of Interpretation -- 3. The Future of the Past -- Conclusion: The Past in the Present -- Notes -- Index Warren argues,... mehr

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    Frontmatter -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- 1. Historicizing African American Literature -- 2. Particularity and the Problem of Interpretation -- 3. The Future of the Past -- Conclusion: The Past in the Present -- Notes -- Index Warren argues, quite bluntly, that "African American literature" has outlived its relevance as the dominant category for poetry, fiction, and plays written by African Americans. Contradicting an influential portion of the field, which regards this literature as an emanation of vernacular expression going back to slavery, and even to Africa, Warren asserts that African American literature was the body of literature and criticism written by black Americans within and against the strictures of Jim Crow America. In arguing against the continued relevance of the category of African American literature, Warren is certainly not claiming that racism has ceased to exist. Rather, he says that while it continues to make a great difference in African American life, other social and political factors weigh heavily also - so much so that categories which take race as the fundamental unifying category of black expression no longer serve well in meeting the challenges of the moment. In this respect, Warren shows that "African American literature" is a category that has not sufficiently adjusted with our current material and ideological circumstances to warrant claims to a changing present or a provisional futurity. Warren argues that the presumptions and protocols of the category remain ossified within the past, within a definition that only shows how its primary arbiters and practitioners were themselves ossified as contradictory or compromised men of their time

     

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    Quelle: Verbundkataloge
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9780674059566
    Weitere Identifier:
    Schlagworte: African Americans in literature; American literature; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / African American Studies
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (192 p)
  3. Amiri Baraka
    The Politics and Art of a Black Intellectual
    Autor*in: Watts, Jerry
    Erschienen: [2001]; ©2001
    Verlag:  New York University Press, New York, NY

    Amiri Baraka, formerly known as LeRoi Jones, became known as one of the most militant, anti-white black nationalists of the 1960s Black Power movement. An advocate of Black Cultural Nationalism, Baraka supported the rejection of all things white and... mehr

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    Amiri Baraka, formerly known as LeRoi Jones, became known as one of the most militant, anti-white black nationalists of the 1960s Black Power movement. An advocate of Black Cultural Nationalism, Baraka supported the rejection of all things white and western. He helped found and direct the influential Black Arts movement which sought to move black writers away from western aesthetic sensibilities and toward a more complete embrace of the black world. Except perhaps for James Baldwin, no single figure has had more of an impact on black intellectual and artistic life during the last forty years. In this groundbreaking and comprehensive study, the first to interweave Baraka's art and political activities, Jerry Watts takes us from his early immersion in the New York scene through the most dynamic period in the life and work of this controversial figure. Watts situates Baraka within the various worlds through which he travelled including Beat Bohemia, Marxist-Leninism, and Black Nationalism. In the process, he convincingly demonstrates how the 25 years between Baraka's emergence in 1960 and his continued influence in the mid-1980s can also be read as a general commentary on the condition of black intellectuals during the same time. Continually using Baraka as the focal point for a broader analysis, Watts illustrates the link between Baraka's life and the lives of other black writers trying to realize their artistic ambitions, and contrasts him with other key political intellectuals of the time. In a chapter sure to prove controversial, Watts links Baraka's famous misogyny to an attempt to bury his own homosexual past. A work of extraordinary breadth, Amira Baraka is a powerful portrait of one man's lifework and the pivotal time it represents in African-American history. Informed by a wealth of original research, it fills a crucial gap in the lively literature on black thought and history and will continue to be a touchstone work for some time to come

     

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  4. Black Frankenstein
    The Making of an American Metaphor
    Erschienen: [2008]
    Verlag:  New York University Press, New York, NY

    For all the scholarship devoted to Mary Shelley's English novel Frankenstein, there has been surprisingly little attention paid to its role in American culture, and virtually none to its racial resonances in the United States. In Black Frankenstein,... mehr

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    For all the scholarship devoted to Mary Shelley's English novel Frankenstein, there has been surprisingly little attention paid to its role in American culture, and virtually none to its racial resonances in the United States. In Black Frankenstein, Elizabeth Young identifies and interprets the figure of a black American Frankenstein monster as it appears with surprising frequency throughout nineteenth- and twentieth-century U.S. culture, in fiction, film, essays, oratory, painting, and other media, and in works by both whites and African Americans.Black Frankenstein stories, Young argues, effect four kinds of racial critique: they humanize the slave; they explain, if not justify, black violence; they condemn the slaveowner; and they expose the instability of white power. The black Frankenstein's monster has served as a powerful metaphor for reinforcing racial hierarchy—and as an even more powerful metaphor for shaping anti-racist critique. Illuminating the power of parody and reappropriation, Black Frankenstein tells the story of a metaphor that continues to matter to literature, culture, aesthetics, and politics Frontmatter -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1 United States of Frankenstein -- 2 Black Monsters, Dead Metaphors -- 3 The Signifying Monster -- 4 Souls on Ice -- Afterword -- Notes -- Index -- About the Author

     

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  5. Beyond the Color Line and the Iron Curtain
    Reading Encounters between Black and Red, 1922-1963
    Erschienen: [2002]; © 2002
    Verlag:  Duke University Press, Durham

    Examining the significant influence of the Soviet Union on the work of four major African American authors-and on twentieth-century American debates about race-Beyond the Color Line and the Iron Curtain remaps black modernism, revealing the... mehr

    Brandenburgische Technische Universität Cottbus - Senftenberg, Universitätsbibliothek
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    Examining the significant influence of the Soviet Union on the work of four major African American authors-and on twentieth-century American debates about race-Beyond the Color Line and the Iron Curtain remaps black modernism, revealing the importance of the Soviet experience in the formation of a black transnationalism.Langston Hughes, W. E. B. Du Bois, Claude McKay, and Paul Robeson each lived or traveled extensively in the Soviet Union between the 1920s and the 1960s, and each reflected on Communism and Soviet life in works that have been largely unavailable, overlooked, or understudied. Kate A. Baldwin takes up these writings, as well as considerable material from Soviet sources-including articles in Pravda and Ogonek, political cartoons, Russian translations of unpublished manuscripts now lost, and mistranslations of major texts-to consider how these writers influenced and were influenced by both Soviet and American culture. Her work demonstrates how the construction of a new Soviet citizen attracted African Americans to the Soviet Union, where they could explore a national identity putatively free of class, gender, and racial biases. While Hughes and McKay later renounced their affiliations with the Soviet Union, Baldwin shows how, in different ways, both Hughes and McKay, as well as Du Bois and Robeson, used their encounters with the U. S. S. R. and Soviet models to rethink the exclusionary practices of citizenship and national belonging in the United States, and to move toward an internationalism that was a dynamic mix of antiracism, anticolonialism, social democracy, and international socialism.Recovering what Baldwin terms the "Soviet archive of Black America," this book forces a rereading of some of the most important African American writers and of the transnational circuits of black modernism

     

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    Volltext (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    Quelle: Verbundkataloge
    Beteiligt: Pease, Donald E. (Hrsg.)
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9780822383833
    Weitere Identifier:
    Schriftenreihe: New Americanists
    Schlagworte: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / African American Studies; African American arts; African American authors; African American intellectuals; African Americans; Communism
    Umfang: 1 online resource (359 pages), 19 b&w photos
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    Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 12. Dez 2020)

  6. Territories of the Soul
    Queered Belonging in the Black Diaspora
    Autor*in: Ellis, Nadia
    Erschienen: [2015]; © 2015
    Verlag:  Duke University Press, Durham

    Nadia Ellis attends to African diasporic belonging as it comes into being through black expressive culture. Living in the diaspora, Ellis asserts, means existing between claims to land and imaginative flights unmoored from the earth-that is, to live... mehr

    Freie Universität Berlin, Universitätsbibliothek
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    Brandenburgische Technische Universität Cottbus - Senftenberg, Universitätsbibliothek
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    Nadia Ellis attends to African diasporic belonging as it comes into being through black expressive culture. Living in the diaspora, Ellis asserts, means existing between claims to land and imaginative flights unmoored from the earth-that is, to live within the territories of the soul. Drawing on the work of Jose Muñoz, Ellis connects queerness' utopian potential with diasporic aesthetics. Occupying the territory of the soul, being neither here nor there, creates in diasporic subjects feelings of loss, desire, and a sensation of a pull from elsewhere. Ellis locates these phenomena in the works of C.L.R. James, the testy encounter between George Lamming and James Baldwin at the 1956 Congress of Negro Artists and Writers in Paris, the elusiveness of the queer diasporic subject in Andrew Salkey's novel Escape to an Autumn Pavement, and the trope of spirit possession in Nathaniel Mackey's writing and Burning Spear's reggae. Ellis' use of queer and affect theory shows how geographies claim diasporic subjects in ways that nationalist or masculinist tropes can never fully capture. Diaspora, Ellis concludes, is best understood as a mode of feeling and belonging, one fundamentally shaped by the experience of loss

     

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    Quelle: Philologische Bibliothek, FU Berlin
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9780822375104
    Weitere Identifier:
    RVK Klassifikation: HU 1728 ; HQ 7026 ; HP 1117
    Schlagworte: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / African American Studies; African diaspora; American literature; Caribbean literature; Group identity; Queer theory
    Umfang: 1 online resource (256 pages), 5 illustrations
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    Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 25. Nov 2020)

  7. Thinking Through Crisis
    Depression-Era Black Literature, Theory, and Politics
    Erschienen: [2019]; © 2019
    Verlag:  Fordham University Press, New York, NY

    In Thinking Through Crisis, James Edward Ford III examines the works of Richard Wright, Ida B. Wells, W. E. B. Du Bois, Zora Neale Hurston, and Langston Hughes during the 1930s in order to articulate a materialist theory of trauma. Ford highlights... mehr

    Brandenburgische Technische Universität Cottbus - Senftenberg, Universitätsbibliothek
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    In Thinking Through Crisis, James Edward Ford III examines the works of Richard Wright, Ida B. Wells, W. E. B. Du Bois, Zora Neale Hurston, and Langston Hughes during the 1930s in order to articulate a materialist theory of trauma. Ford highlights the dark proletariat’s emergence from the multitude apposite to white supremacist agendas. In these works, Ford argues, proletarian, modernist, and surrealist aesthetics transform fugitive slaves, sharecroppers, leased convicts, levee workers, and activist intellectuals into protagonists of anti-racist and anti-capitalist movements in the United States.Thinking Through Crisis intervenes in debates on the 1930s, radical subjectivity, and states of emergency. It will be of interest to scholars of American literature, African American literature, proletarian literature, black studies, trauma theory, and political theory

     

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    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9780823286935
    Weitere Identifier:
    Schriftenreihe: Commonalities
    Schlagworte: African American Literature; Black Studies; Crisis; Great Depression; Proletariat; Trauma Theory; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / African American Studies; American literature; Depressions in literature; Race discrimination in literature
    Umfang: 1 online resource (336 pages)
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    Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 23. Jul 2020)

  8. Black Frankenstein
    The Making of an American Metaphor
    Erschienen: [2008]; © 2008
    Verlag:  New York University Press, New York, NY

    For all the scholarship devoted to Mary Shelley's English novel Frankenstein, there has been surprisingly little attention paid to its role in American culture, and virtually none to its racial resonances in the United States. In Black Frankenstein,... mehr

    Brandenburgische Technische Universität Cottbus - Senftenberg, Universitätsbibliothek
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    For all the scholarship devoted to Mary Shelley's English novel Frankenstein, there has been surprisingly little attention paid to its role in American culture, and virtually none to its racial resonances in the United States. In Black Frankenstein, Elizabeth Young identifies and interprets the figure of a black American Frankenstein monster as it appears with surprising frequency throughout nineteenth- and twentieth-century U.S. culture, in fiction, film, essays, oratory, painting, and other media, and in works by both whites and African Americans.Black Frankenstein stories, Young argues, effect four kinds of racial critique: they humanize the slave; they explain, if not justify, black violence; they condemn the slaveowner; and they expose the instability of white power. The black Frankenstein's monster has served as a powerful metaphor for reinforcing racial hierarchy—and as an even more powerful metaphor for shaping anti-racist critique. Illuminating the power of parody and reappropriation, Black Frankenstein tells the story of a metaphor that continues to matter to literature, culture, aesthetics, and politics

     

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  9. Archives of Flesh
    African America, Spain, and Post-Humanist Critique
    Erschienen: [2016]; © 2016
    Verlag:  New York University Press, New York, NY

    Enlists the principles of post-humanist critique in order to investigate decades of intimate dialogues between African American and Spanish intellectuals In Archives of Flesh, Robert Reid-Pharr reveals the deep history of intellectual engagement... mehr

    Brandenburgische Technische Universität Cottbus - Senftenberg, Universitätsbibliothek
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    Enlists the principles of post-humanist critique in order to investigate decades of intimate dialogues between African American and Spanish intellectuals In Archives of Flesh, Robert Reid-Pharr reveals the deep history of intellectual engagement between African America and Spain. Opening a fascinating window onto black and anti-Fascist intellectual life from 1898 through the mid-1950s, Reid-Pharr argues that key institutions of Western Humanism, including American colleges and universities, developed in intimate relation to slavery, colonization, and white supremacy. This retreat to rigidly established philosophical and critical traditions can never fully address—or even fully recognize—the deep-seated hostility to black subjectivity underlying the humanist ideal of a transcendent Manhood. Calling for a specifically anti-white supremacist reexamination of the archives of black subjectivity and resistance, Reid-Pharr enlists the principles of post-humanist critique in order to investigate decades of intimate dialogues between African American and Spanish intellectuals, including Salaria Kea, Federico Garcia Lorca, Nella Larsen, Langston Hughes, Richard Wright, Chester Himes, Lynn Nottage, and Pablo Picasso. In the process Reid-Pharr takes up the "African American Spanish Archive" in order to resist the anti-corporeal, anti-black, anti-human biases that stand at the heart of Western Humanism.Enlists the principles of post-humanist critique in order to investigate decades of intimate dialogues between African American and Spanish intellectuals In Archives of Flesh, Robert Reid-Pharr reveals the deep history of intellectual engagement between African America and Spain. Opening a fascinating window onto black and anti-Fascist intellectual life from 1898 through the mid-1950s, Reid-Pharr argues that key institutions of Western Humanism, including American colleges and universities, developed in intimate relation to slavery, colonization, and white supremacy. This retreat to rigidly established philosophical and critical traditions can never fully address—or even fully recognize—the deep-seated hostility to black subjectivity underlying the humanist ideal of a transcendent Manhood. Calling for a specifically anti-white supremacist reexamination of the archives of black subjectivity and resistance, Reid-Pharr enlists the principles of post-humanist critique in order to investigate decades of intimate dialogues between African American and Spanish intellectuals, including Salaria Kea, Federico Garcia Lorca, Nella Larsen, Langston Hughes, Richard Wright, Chester Himes, Lynn Nottage, and Pablo Picasso.

     

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    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781479824267
    Weitere Identifier:
    Schriftenreihe: Sexual Cultures ; 32
    Schlagworte: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / African American Studies; African Americans in literature; African Americans; American literature; Humanism in literature; Intellectuals
    Umfang: 1 online resource
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    Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 23. Jul 2020)

  10. Afro-fabulations
    the queer drama of Black life
    Autor*in: Nyong'o, Tavia
    Erschienen: [2019]; © 2019
    Verlag:  New York University Press, New York

    Winner, 2019 Barnard Hewitt Award for Outstanding Research in Theatre History, given by the American Society for Theatre ResearchArgues for a conception of black cultural life that exceeds post-blackness and conditions of loss In Afro-Fabulations:... mehr

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    Winner, 2019 Barnard Hewitt Award for Outstanding Research in Theatre History, given by the American Society for Theatre ResearchArgues for a conception of black cultural life that exceeds post-blackness and conditions of loss In Afro-Fabulations: The Queer Drama of Black Life, cultural critic and historian Tavia Nyong’o surveys the conditions of contemporary black artistic production in the era of post-blackness. Moving fluidly between the insurgent art of the 1960’s and the intersectional activism of the present day, Afro-Fabulations challenges genealogies of blackness that ignore its creative capacity to exceed conditions of traumatic loss, social death, and archival erasure.If black survival in an anti-black world often feels like a race against time, Afro-Fabulations looks to the modes of memory and imagination through which a queer and black polytemporality is invented and sustained. Moving past the antirelational debates in queer theory, Nyong’o posits queerness as "angular sociality," drawing upon queer of color critique in order to name the gate and rhythm of black social life as it moves in and out of step with itself. He takes up a broad range of sites of analysis, from speculative fiction to performance art, from artificial intelligence to Blaxploitation cinema. Reading the archive of violence and trauma against the grain, Afro-Fabulations summons the poetic powers of queer world-making that have always been immanent to the fight and play of black life

     

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    ISBN: 9781479806386
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    RVK Klassifikation: HU 1728
    Schriftenreihe: Sexual Cultures
    Schlagworte: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / African American Studies; African Americans in the performing arts; American drama; Gays in the performing arts; Homosexuality in the theater; LGBT <Motiv>; Ethnische Identität <Motiv>; Drama; Schwarze
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (ix, 265 Seiten), Illustrationen
  11. Beyond the Color Line and the Iron Curtain
    Reading Encounters between Black and Red, 1922–1963
    Autor*in: Baldwin, Kate A
    Erschienen: [2002]
    Verlag:  Duke University Press, Durham

    Frontmatter -- CONTENTS -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: The Demand for a New Kind of Person: Black Americans and the Soviet Union, 1922–1963 -- 1 ‘‘Not at All God’s White People’’: McKay and the Negro in Red -- 2 Between Harem and Harlem: Hughes... mehr

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    Frontmatter -- CONTENTS -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: The Demand for a New Kind of Person: Black Americans and the Soviet Union, 1922–1963 -- 1 ‘‘Not at All God’s White People’’: McKay and the Negro in Red -- 2 Between Harem and Harlem: Hughes and the Ways of the Veil -- 3 Du Bois, Russia, and the ‘‘Refusal to Be ‘White,’ ’’ -- 4 Black Shadows across the Iron Curtain: Robeson’s Stance between Cold War Cultures -- Epilogue: The Only Television Hostess Who Doesn’t Turn Red -- Notes -- Selected Bibliography -- Index Examining the significant influence of the Soviet Union on the work of four major African American authors—and on twentieth-century American debates about race—Beyond the Color Line and the Iron Curtain remaps black modernism, revealing the importance of the Soviet experience in the formation of a black transnationalism.Langston Hughes, W. E. B. Du Bois, Claude McKay, and Paul Robeson each lived or traveled extensively in the Soviet Union between the 1920s and the 1960s, and each reflected on Communism and Soviet life in works that have been largely unavailable, overlooked, or understudied. Kate A. Baldwin takes up these writings, as well as considerable material from Soviet sources—including articles in Pravda and Ogonek, political cartoons, Russian translations of unpublished manuscripts now lost, and mistranslations of major texts—to consider how these writers influenced and were influenced by both Soviet and American culture. Her work demonstrates how the construction of a new Soviet citizen attracted African Americans to the Soviet Union, where they could explore a national identity putatively free of class, gender, and racial biases. While Hughes and McKay later renounced their affiliations with the Soviet Union, Baldwin shows how, in different ways, both Hughes and McKay, as well as Du Bois and Robeson, used their encounters with the U. S. S. R. and Soviet models to rethink the exclusionary practices of citizenship and national belonging in the United States, and to move toward an internationalism that was a dynamic mix of antiracism, anticolonialism, social democracy, and international socialism.Recovering what Baldwin terms the "Soviet archive of Black America," this book forces a rereading of some of the most important African American writers and of the transnational circuits of black modernism

     

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    ISBN: 9780822383833
    Weitere Identifier:
    Schriftenreihe: New Americanists
    Schlagworte: African American arts; African American authors; African American intellectuals; African Americans; Communism; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / African American Studies
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (359 p), 19 b&w photos
  12. Territories of the Soul
    Queered Belonging in the Black Diaspora
    Autor*in: Ellis, Nadia
    Erschienen: [2015]
    Verlag:  Duke University Press, Durham

    Frontmatter -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: The Queer Elsewhere of Black Diaspora -- One. The Attachments of C. L. R. James -- Two. The Fraternal Agonies of Baldwin and Lamming -- Three. Andrew Salkey and the Queer Diasporic -- Four.... mehr

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    Frontmatter -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: The Queer Elsewhere of Black Diaspora -- One. The Attachments of C. L. R. James -- Two. The Fraternal Agonies of Baldwin and Lamming -- Three. Andrew Salkey and the Queer Diasporic -- Four. Burning Spear and Nathaniel Mackey at Large -- Epilogue: Dancehall's Urban Possessions -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index Nadia Ellis attends to African diasporic belonging as it comes into being through black expressive culture. Living in the diaspora, Ellis asserts, means existing between claims to land and imaginative flights unmoored from the earth-that is, to live within the territories of the soul. Drawing on the work of Jose Muñoz, Ellis connects queerness' utopian potential with diasporic aesthetics. Occupying the territory of the soul, being neither here nor there, creates in diasporic subjects feelings of loss, desire, and a sensation of a pull from elsewhere. Ellis locates these phenomena in the works of C.L.R. James, the testy encounter between George Lamming and James Baldwin at the 1956 Congress of Negro Artists and Writers in Paris, the elusiveness of the queer diasporic subject in Andrew Salkey's novel Escape to an Autumn Pavement, and the trope of spirit possession in Nathaniel Mackey's writing and Burning Spear's reggae. Ellis' use of queer and affect theory shows how geographies claim diasporic subjects in ways that nationalist or masculinist tropes can never fully capture. Diaspora, Ellis concludes, is best understood as a mode of feeling and belonging, one fundamentally shaped by the experience of loss

     

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    ISBN: 9780822375104
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    Schlagworte: African diaspora; American literature; Caribbean literature; Group identity; Queer theory; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / African American Studies
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (256 p), 5 illustrations
  13. Thinking Through Crisis
    Depression-Era Black Literature, Theory, and Politics
    Erschienen: [2019]
    Verlag:  Fordham University Press, New York, NY

    Frontmatter -- CONTENTS -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: From Being to Unrest, from Objectivity to Motion -- Notebook 1. Down by the Riverside: Richard Wright, the 1927 Flood, and the Citizen-Refugee -- Notebook 2. “Crusade for Justice”: Ida B.... mehr

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    Frontmatter -- CONTENTS -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: From Being to Unrest, from Objectivity to Motion -- Notebook 1. Down by the Riverside: Richard Wright, the 1927 Flood, and the Citizen-Refugee -- Notebook 2. “Crusade for Justice”: Ida B. Wells and the Power of the Multitude -- Notebook 3. W. E. B. Du Bois’s Black Reconstruction: Theorizing Divine Violence -- Notebook 4. Zora Neale Hurston’s Moses, Man of the Mountain: An Anthropology of Power -- Notebook 5. The New Day: Notes on Education and the Dark Proletariat -- Conclusion: From Being to Unrest, from Objectivity to Motion— A Race for Theory -- Notes -- Index -- About the Author In Thinking Through Crisis, James Edward Ford III examines the works of Richard Wright, Ida B. Wells, W. E. B. Du Bois, Zora Neale Hurston, and Langston Hughes during the 1930s in order to articulate a materialist theory of trauma. Ford highlights the dark proletariat’s emergence from the multitude apposite to white supremacist agendas. In these works, Ford argues, proletarian, modernist, and surrealist aesthetics transform fugitive slaves, sharecroppers, leased convicts, levee workers, and activist intellectuals into protagonists of anti-racist and anti-capitalist movements in the United States.Thinking Through Crisis intervenes in debates on the 1930s, radical subjectivity, and states of emergency. It will be of interest to scholars of American literature, African American literature, proletarian literature, black studies, trauma theory, and political theory

     

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    ISBN: 9780823286935
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    Schriftenreihe: Commonalities
    Schlagworte: Race discrimination in literature; American literature; Depressions in literature; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / African American Studies
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (336 p)
  14. Afro-Fabulations
    The Queer Drama of Black Life
    Autor*in: Nyong'o, Tavia
    Erschienen: [2018]
    Verlag:  New York University Press, New York, NY

    Frontmatter -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Introduction -- 1. Critical Shade -- 2. Crushed Black -- 3. Brer Soul and the Mythic Being -- 4. Deep Time, Dark Time -- 5. Little Monsters -- 6. Fabulous, Formless -- 7. Habeas Ficta -- 8 Chore and... mehr

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    Frontmatter -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Introduction -- 1. Critical Shade -- 2. Crushed Black -- 3. Brer Soul and the Mythic Being -- 4. Deep Time, Dark Time -- 5. Little Monsters -- 6. Fabulous, Formless -- 7. Habeas Ficta -- 8 Chore and Choice -- Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Index -- About the Author Winner, 2019 Barnard Hewitt Award for Outstanding Research in Theatre History, given by the American Society for Theatre ResearchArgues for a conception of black cultural life that exceeds post-blackness and conditions of loss In Afro-Fabulations: The Queer Drama of Black Life, cultural critic and historian Tavia Nyong’o surveys the conditions of contemporary black artistic production in the era of post-blackness. Moving fluidly between the insurgent art of the 1960’s and the intersectional activism of the present day, Afro-Fabulations challenges genealogies of blackness that ignore its creative capacity to exceed conditions of traumatic loss, social death, and archival erasure.If black survival in an anti-black world often feels like a race against time, Afro-Fabulations looks to the modes of memory and imagination through which a queer and black polytemporality is invented and sustained. Moving past the antirelational debates in queer theory, Nyong’o posits queerness as “angular sociality,” drawing upon queer of color critique in order to name the gate and rhythm of black social life as it moves in and out of step with itself. He takes up a broad range of sites of analysis, from speculative fiction to performance art, from artificial intelligence to Blaxploitation cinema. Reading the archive of violence and trauma against the grain, Afro-Fabulations summons the poetic powers of queer world-making that have always been immanent to the fight and play of black life

     

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    ISBN: 9781479806386
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    Schriftenreihe: Sexual Cultures ; 14
    Schlagworte: Homosexuality in the theater; Gays in the performing arts; American drama; African Americans in the performing arts; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / African American Studies
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource, 20 black and white illustrations
  15. Archives of Flesh
    African America, Spain, and Post-Humanist Critique
    Erschienen: [2016]
    Verlag:  New York University Press, New York, NY

    Enlists the principles of ... Frontmatter -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1. War Archive -- 2. Lorca’s Deathly Poetics -- 3. Langston’s Adventures in the Dark -- 4. Primitive at the Plantation’s Edge -- 5. Richard Wright in the... mehr

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    Enlists the principles of ... Frontmatter -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1. War Archive -- 2. Lorca’s Deathly Poetics -- 3. Langston’s Adventures in the Dark -- 4. Primitive at the Plantation’s Edge -- 5. Richard Wright in the House of Girls -- Conclusion -- Notes -- Index -- About the Author

     

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    Schriftenreihe: Sexual Cultures ; 32
    Schlagworte: Intellectuals; African Americans in literature; African Americans; American literature; Humanism in literature; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / African American Studies
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (1 online resource)
  16. Racial Innocence
    Performing American Childhood from Slavery to Civil Rights
    Erschienen: [2011]; © 2011
    Verlag:  New York University Press, New York, NY

    2013 Book Award Winner from the International Research Society in Children's Literature2012 Outstanding Book Award Winner from the Association for Theatre in Higher Education 2012 Winner of the Lois P. Rudnick Book Prize presented by the New England... mehr

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    2013 Book Award Winner from the International Research Society in Children's Literature2012 Outstanding Book Award Winner from the Association for Theatre in Higher Education 2012 Winner of the Lois P. Rudnick Book Prize presented by the New England American Studies Association 2012 Runner-Up, John Hope Franklin Publication Prize presented by the American Studies Association2012 Honorable Mention, Distinguished Book Award presented by the Society for the Study of American Women WritersPart of the American Literatures Initiative Series Beginning in the mid nineteenth century in America, childhood became synonymous with innocence—a reversal of the previously-dominant Calvinist belief that children were depraved, sinful creatures. As the idea of childhood innocence took hold, it became racialized: popular culture constructed white children as innocent and vulnerable while excluding black youth from these qualities. Actors, writers, and visual artists then began pairing white children with African American adults and children, thus transferring the quality of innocence to a variety of racial-political projects—a dynamic that Robin Bernstein calls "racial innocence." This phenomenon informed racial formation from the mid nineteenth century through the early twentieth. Racial Innocence takes up a rich archive including books, toys, theatrical props, and domestic knickknacks which Bernstein analyzes as "scriptive things" that invite or prompt historically-located practices while allowing for resistance and social improvisation. Integrating performance studies with literary and visual analysis, Bernstein offers singular readings of theatrical productions from blackface minstrelsy to Uncle Tom’s Cabin to The Wonderful Wizard of Oz; literary works by Joel Chandler Harris, Harriet Wilson, and Frances Hodgson Burnett; material culture including Topsy pincushions, Uncle Tom and Little Eva handkerchiefs, and Raggedy Ann dolls; and visual texts ranging from fine portraiture to advertisements for lard substitute. Throughout, Bernstein shows how "innocence" gradually became the exclusive province of white children—until the Civil Rights Movement succeeded not only in legally desegregating public spaces, but in culturally desegregating the concept of childhood itself.Check out the author's blog for the book here

     

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    ISBN: 9780814787090
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    Schriftenreihe: America and the Long 19th Century ; 16
    Schlagworte: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / African American Studies; Children in literature; Racism in literature; Slavery; Slavery; Rassismus; Kind <Motiv>; Kultur; Literatur
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  17. Afro-Fabulations
    The Queer Drama of Black Life
    Autor*in: Nyong'o, Tavia
    Erschienen: [2018]; © 2018
    Verlag:  New York University Press, New York, NY

    Winner, 2019 Barnard Hewitt Award for Outstanding Research in Theatre History, given by the American Society for Theatre ResearchArgues for a conception of black cultural life that exceeds post-blackness and conditions of loss In Afro-Fabulations:... mehr

     

    Winner, 2019 Barnard Hewitt Award for Outstanding Research in Theatre History, given by the American Society for Theatre ResearchArgues for a conception of black cultural life that exceeds post-blackness and conditions of loss In Afro-Fabulations: The Queer Drama of Black Life, cultural critic and historian Tavia Nyong’o surveys the conditions of contemporary black artistic production in the era of post-blackness. Moving fluidly between the insurgent art of the 1960’s and the intersectional activism of the present day, Afro-Fabulations challenges genealogies of blackness that ignore its creative capacity to exceed conditions of traumatic loss, social death, and archival erasure.If black survival in an anti-black world often feels like a race against time, Afro-Fabulations looks to the modes of memory and imagination through which a queer and black polytemporality is invented and sustained. Moving past the antirelational debates in queer theory, Nyong’o posits queerness as "angular sociality," drawing upon queer of color critique in order to name the gate and rhythm of black social life as it moves in and out of step with itself. He takes up a broad range of sites of analysis, from speculative fiction to performance art, from artificial intelligence to Blaxploitation cinema. Reading the archive of violence and trauma against the grain, Afro-Fabulations summons the poetic powers of queer world-making that have always been immanent to the fight and play of black life

     

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    ISBN: 9781479806386
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    Schriftenreihe: Sexual Cultures ; 14
    Schlagworte: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / African American Studies; African Americans in the performing arts; American drama; Gays in the performing arts; Homosexuality in the theater; LGBT <Motiv>; Ethnische Identität <Motiv>; Drama; Schwarze
    Umfang: 1 online resource, 20 black and white illustrations
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  18. Beyond the Color Line and the Iron Curtain
    Reading Encounters between Black and Red, 1922-1963
    Erschienen: [2002]; © 2002
    Verlag:  Duke University Press, Durham

    Examining the significant influence of the Soviet Union on the work of four major African American authors-and on twentieth-century American debates about race-Beyond the Color Line and the Iron Curtain remaps black modernism, revealing the... mehr

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    Examining the significant influence of the Soviet Union on the work of four major African American authors-and on twentieth-century American debates about race-Beyond the Color Line and the Iron Curtain remaps black modernism, revealing the importance of the Soviet experience in the formation of a black transnationalism.Langston Hughes, W. E. B. Du Bois, Claude McKay, and Paul Robeson each lived or traveled extensively in the Soviet Union between the 1920s and the 1960s, and each reflected on Communism and Soviet life in works that have been largely unavailable, overlooked, or understudied. Kate A. Baldwin takes up these writings, as well as considerable material from Soviet sources-including articles in Pravda and Ogonek, political cartoons, Russian translations of unpublished manuscripts now lost, and mistranslations of major texts-to consider how these writers influenced and were influenced by both Soviet and American culture. Her work demonstrates how the construction of a new Soviet citizen attracted African Americans to the Soviet Union, where they could explore a national identity putatively free of class, gender, and racial biases. While Hughes and McKay later renounced their affiliations with the Soviet Union, Baldwin shows how, in different ways, both Hughes and McKay, as well as Du Bois and Robeson, used their encounters with the U. S. S. R. and Soviet models to rethink the exclusionary practices of citizenship and national belonging in the United States, and to move toward an internationalism that was a dynamic mix of antiracism, anticolonialism, social democracy, and international socialism.Recovering what Baldwin terms the "Soviet archive of Black America," this book forces a rereading of some of the most important African American writers and of the transnational circuits of black modernism

     

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    Beteiligt: Pease, Donald E. (Hrsg.)
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9780822383833
    Weitere Identifier:
    Schriftenreihe: New Americanists
    Schlagworte: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / African American Studies; African American arts; African American authors; African American intellectuals; African Americans; Communism
    Umfang: 1 online resource (359 pages), 19 b&w photos
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  19. Territories of the Soul
    Queered Belonging in the Black Diaspora
    Autor*in: Ellis, Nadia
    Erschienen: [2015]; © 2015
    Verlag:  Duke University Press, Durham

    Nadia Ellis attends to African diasporic belonging as it comes into being through black expressive culture. Living in the diaspora, Ellis asserts, means existing between claims to land and imaginative flights unmoored from the earth-that is, to live... mehr

    Ostbayerische Technische Hochschule Amberg-Weiden / Hochschulbibliothek Amberg
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    Nadia Ellis attends to African diasporic belonging as it comes into being through black expressive culture. Living in the diaspora, Ellis asserts, means existing between claims to land and imaginative flights unmoored from the earth-that is, to live within the territories of the soul. Drawing on the work of Jose Muñoz, Ellis connects queerness' utopian potential with diasporic aesthetics. Occupying the territory of the soul, being neither here nor there, creates in diasporic subjects feelings of loss, desire, and a sensation of a pull from elsewhere. Ellis locates these phenomena in the works of C.L.R. James, the testy encounter between George Lamming and James Baldwin at the 1956 Congress of Negro Artists and Writers in Paris, the elusiveness of the queer diasporic subject in Andrew Salkey's novel Escape to an Autumn Pavement, and the trope of spirit possession in Nathaniel Mackey's writing and Burning Spear's reggae. Ellis' use of queer and affect theory shows how geographies claim diasporic subjects in ways that nationalist or masculinist tropes can never fully capture. Diaspora, Ellis concludes, is best understood as a mode of feeling and belonging, one fundamentally shaped by the experience of loss

     

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    ISBN: 9780822375104
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    Schlagworte: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / African American Studies; African diaspora; American literature; Caribbean literature; Group identity; Queer theory
    Umfang: 1 online resource (256 pages), 5 illustrations
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  20. Thinking Through Crisis
    Depression-Era Black Literature, Theory, and Politics
    Erschienen: [2019]; © 2019
    Verlag:  Fordham University Press, New York, NY

    In Thinking Through Crisis, James Edward Ford III examines the works of Richard Wright, Ida B. Wells, W. E. B. Du Bois, Zora Neale Hurston, and Langston Hughes during the 1930s in order to articulate a materialist theory of trauma. Ford highlights... mehr

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    In Thinking Through Crisis, James Edward Ford III examines the works of Richard Wright, Ida B. Wells, W. E. B. Du Bois, Zora Neale Hurston, and Langston Hughes during the 1930s in order to articulate a materialist theory of trauma. Ford highlights the dark proletariat’s emergence from the multitude apposite to white supremacist agendas. In these works, Ford argues, proletarian, modernist, and surrealist aesthetics transform fugitive slaves, sharecroppers, leased convicts, levee workers, and activist intellectuals into protagonists of anti-racist and anti-capitalist movements in the United States.Thinking Through Crisis intervenes in debates on the 1930s, radical subjectivity, and states of emergency. It will be of interest to scholars of American literature, African American literature, proletarian literature, black studies, trauma theory, and political theory

     

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    ISBN: 9780823286935
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    Schriftenreihe: Commonalities
    Schlagworte: African American Literature; Black Studies; Crisis; Great Depression; Proletariat; Trauma Theory; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / African American Studies; American literature; Depressions in literature; Race discrimination in literature
    Umfang: 1 online resource (336 pages)
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    Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 23. Jul 2020)

  21. Black Frankenstein
    The Making of an American Metaphor
    Erschienen: [2008]; © 2008
    Verlag:  New York University Press, New York, NY

    For all the scholarship devoted to Mary Shelley's English novel Frankenstein, there has been surprisingly little attention paid to its role in American culture, and virtually none to its racial resonances in the United States. In Black Frankenstein,... mehr

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    For all the scholarship devoted to Mary Shelley's English novel Frankenstein, there has been surprisingly little attention paid to its role in American culture, and virtually none to its racial resonances in the United States. In Black Frankenstein, Elizabeth Young identifies and interprets the figure of a black American Frankenstein monster as it appears with surprising frequency throughout nineteenth- and twentieth-century U.S. culture, in fiction, film, essays, oratory, painting, and other media, and in works by both whites and African Americans.Black Frankenstein stories, Young argues, effect four kinds of racial critique: they humanize the slave; they explain, if not justify, black violence; they condemn the slaveowner; and they expose the instability of white power. The black Frankenstein's monster has served as a powerful metaphor for reinforcing racial hierarchy—and as an even more powerful metaphor for shaping anti-racist critique. Illuminating the power of parody and reappropriation, Black Frankenstein tells the story of a metaphor that continues to matter to literature, culture, aesthetics, and politics

     

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  22. Archives of Flesh
    African America, Spain, and Post-Humanist Critique
    Erschienen: [2016]; © 2016
    Verlag:  New York University Press, New York, NY

    Enlists the principles of post-humanist critique in order to investigate decades of intimate dialogues between African American and Spanish intellectuals In Archives of Flesh, Robert Reid-Pharr reveals the deep history of intellectual engagement... mehr

    Ostbayerische Technische Hochschule Amberg-Weiden / Hochschulbibliothek Amberg
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    Enlists the principles of post-humanist critique in order to investigate decades of intimate dialogues between African American and Spanish intellectuals In Archives of Flesh, Robert Reid-Pharr reveals the deep history of intellectual engagement between African America and Spain. Opening a fascinating window onto black and anti-Fascist intellectual life from 1898 through the mid-1950s, Reid-Pharr argues that key institutions of Western Humanism, including American colleges and universities, developed in intimate relation to slavery, colonization, and white supremacy. This retreat to rigidly established philosophical and critical traditions can never fully address—or even fully recognize—the deep-seated hostility to black subjectivity underlying the humanist ideal of a transcendent Manhood. Calling for a specifically anti-white supremacist reexamination of the archives of black subjectivity and resistance, Reid-Pharr enlists the principles of post-humanist critique in order to investigate decades of intimate dialogues between African American and Spanish intellectuals, including Salaria Kea, Federico Garcia Lorca, Nella Larsen, Langston Hughes, Richard Wright, Chester Himes, Lynn Nottage, and Pablo Picasso. In the process Reid-Pharr takes up the "African American Spanish Archive" in order to resist the anti-corporeal, anti-black, anti-human biases that stand at the heart of Western Humanism.Enlists the principles of post-humanist critique in order to investigate decades of intimate dialogues between African American and Spanish intellectuals In Archives of Flesh, Robert Reid-Pharr reveals the deep history of intellectual engagement between African America and Spain. Opening a fascinating window onto black and anti-Fascist intellectual life from 1898 through the mid-1950s, Reid-Pharr argues that key institutions of Western Humanism, including American colleges and universities, developed in intimate relation to slavery, colonization, and white supremacy. This retreat to rigidly established philosophical and critical traditions can never fully address—or even fully recognize—the deep-seated hostility to black subjectivity underlying the humanist ideal of a transcendent Manhood. Calling for a specifically anti-white supremacist reexamination of the archives of black subjectivity and resistance, Reid-Pharr enlists the principles of post-humanist critique in order to investigate decades of intimate dialogues between African American and Spanish intellectuals, including Salaria Kea, Federico Garcia Lorca, Nella Larsen, Langston Hughes, Richard Wright, Chester Himes, Lynn Nottage, and Pablo Picasso.

     

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    ISBN: 9781479824267
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    Schriftenreihe: Sexual Cultures ; 32
    Schlagworte: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / African American Studies; African Americans in literature; African Americans; American literature; Humanism in literature; Intellectuals
    Umfang: 1 online resource
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    Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 23. Jul 2020)

  23. The content of our caricature
    African American comic art and political belonging
    Erschienen: [2020]; © 2020
    Verlag:  New York University Press, New York, NY

    Traces the history of racial caricature and the ways that Black cartoonists have turned this visual grammar on its headRevealing the long aesthetic tradition of African American cartoonists who have made use of racist caricature as a black diasporic... mehr

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    Traces the history of racial caricature and the ways that Black cartoonists have turned this visual grammar on its headRevealing the long aesthetic tradition of African American cartoonists who have made use of racist caricature as a black diasporic art practice, Rebecca Wanzo demonstrates how these artists have resisted histories of visual imperialism and their legacies. Moving beyond binaries of positive and negative representation, many black cartoonists have used caricatures to criticize constructions of ideal citizenship in the United States, as well as the alienation of African Americans from such imaginaries. The Content of Our Caricature urges readers to recognize how the wide circulation of comic and cartoon art contributes to a common language of both national belonging and exclusion in the United States.Historically, white artists have rendered white caricatures as virtuous representations of American identity, while their caricatures of African Americans are excluded from these kinds of idealized discourses. Employing a rich illustration program of color and black-and-white reproductions, Wanzo explores the works of artists such as Sam Milai, Larry Fuller, Richard "Grass" Green, Brumsic Brandon Jr., Jennifer Cruté, Aaron McGruder, Kyle Baker, Ollie Harrington, and George Herriman, all of whom negotiate and navigate this troublesome history of caricature. The Content of Our Caricature arrives at a gateway to understanding how a visual grammar of citizenship, and hence American identity itself, has been constructed

     

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  24. The black Civil War soldier
    a visual history of conflict and citizenship
    Autor*in: Willis, Deborah
    Erschienen: [2021]; © 2021
    Verlag:  New York University Press, New York

    A stunning collection of stoic portraits and intimate ephemera from the lives of Black Civil War soldiersThough both the Union and Confederate armies excluded African American men from their initial calls to arms, many of the men who eventually... mehr

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    A stunning collection of stoic portraits and intimate ephemera from the lives of Black Civil War soldiersThough both the Union and Confederate armies excluded African American men from their initial calls to arms, many of the men who eventually served were black. Simultaneously, photography culture blossomed-marking the Civil War as the first conflict to be extensively documented through photographs. In The Black Civil War Soldier, Deb Willis explores the crucial role of photography in (re)telling and shaping African American narratives of the Civil War, pulling from a dynamic visual archive that has largely gone unacknowledged.With over seventy images, The Black Civil War Soldier contains a huge breadth of primary and archival materials, many of which are rarely reproduced. The photographs are supplemented with handwritten captions, letters, and other personal materials; Willis not only dives into the lives of black Union soldiers, but also includes stories of other African Americans involved with the struggle-from left-behind family members to female spies. Willis thus compiles a captivating memoir of photographs and words and examines them together to address themes of love and longing; responsibility and fear; commitment and patriotism; and-most predominantly-African American resilience.The Black Civil War Soldier offers a kaleidoscopic yet intimate portrait of the African American experience, from the beginning of the Civil War to 1900. Through her multimedia analysis, Willis acutely pinpoints the importance of African American communities in the development and prosecution of the war. The book shows how photography helped construct a national vision of blackness, war, and bondage, while unearthing the hidden histories of these black Civil War soldiers. In combating the erasure of this often overlooked history, Willis asks how these images might offer a more nuanced memory of African-American participation in the Civil War, and in doing so, points to individual and collective struggles for citizenship and remembrance

     

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    ISBN: 9781479827145; 9781479826261
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    Schriftenreihe: NYU series in social and cultural analysis ; 11
    Schlagworte: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / African American Studies; African American soldiers; African American soldiers; Fotografie; Ethnische Beziehungen; Schwarze; Militär; Soldat; Motiv; Sezessionskrieg <1861-1865>
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (x, 243 Seiten), Illustrationen
  25. What Was African American Literature?
    Erschienen: [2022]; © 2012
    Verlag:  Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA

    Warren argues, quite bluntly, that "African American literature" has outlived its relevance as the dominant category for poetry, fiction, and plays written by African Americans. Contradicting an influential portion of the field, which regards this... mehr

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    Warren argues, quite bluntly, that "African American literature" has outlived its relevance as the dominant category for poetry, fiction, and plays written by African Americans. Contradicting an influential portion of the field, which regards this literature as an emanation of vernacular expression going back to slavery, and even to Africa, Warren asserts that African American literature was the body of literature and criticism written by black Americans within and against the strictures of Jim Crow America. In arguing against the continued relevance of the category of African American literature, Warren is certainly not claiming that racism has ceased to exist. Rather, he says that while it continues to make a great difference in African American life, other social and political factors weigh heavily also - so much so that categories which take race as the fundamental unifying category of black expression no longer serve well in meeting the challenges of the moment. In this respect, Warren shows that "African American literature" is a category that has not sufficiently adjusted with our current material and ideological circumstances to warrant claims to a changing present or a provisional futurity. Warren argues that the presumptions and protocols of the category remain ossified within the past, within a definition that only shows how its primary arbiters and practitioners were themselves ossified as contradictory or compromised men of their time

     

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    ISBN: 9780674059566
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    Schlagworte: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / African American Studies; African Americans in literature; American literature
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (192 pages)
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    Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 02. Mrz 2022)