Frontmatter -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction / Lacapra, Dominick -- 1. The Master's Pieces: On Canon Formation and the Afro-American Tradition / Gates, Henry Louis -- 2. Moving On Down the Line: Variations on the African-American Sermon / Spillers, Hortense J. -- 3. Appropriating the Idioms of Science: The Rejection of Scientific Racism / Stepan, Nancy Leys / Gilman, Sander L. -- 4. The Color of Politics in the United States: White Supremacy as the Main Explanation for the Peculiarities of American Politics from Colonial Times to the Present / Goldfield, Michael -- 5. Out of Africa: Topologies of Nativism / Appiah, Kwame Anthony -- 6. Autoethnography: The An-archic Style of Dust Tracks on a Road / Lionnet, Françoise -- 7. "The Very House of Difference": Race, Gender, and the Politics of South African Women's Narrative in Poppie Nongena / McClintock, Anne -- 8. Beyond the Limit: The Social Relations of Madness In Southern African Fiction / Clingman, Stephen -- 9. The Subversive Poetics of Radical Bilingualism: Postcolonial Francophone North African Literature / Mehrez, Samia -- 10. Literary Whiteness and the Afro-Hispanic Difference / Piedra, José -- 11. Drawing the Color Line: Kipling and the Culture of Colonial Rule / Mohanty, Satya P. -- Notes on Contributors -- Index The concept of race is central to one of the most powerful ideological formations in history, Dominick LaCapra argues in his introduction to this volume, and understanding the effects of that ideology and its intricate relations with issues of class and gender is one of the most pressing challenges to contemporary modes of thought. The eleven essays comprising The Bounds of Race confront this challenge with insight, rigor, and imagination.The authors take on questions of language, genre, and politics with reference to African-American, Anglo-American, African, South African, Francophone North African, British, and Afro-Hispanic texts. Individual chapters discuss writings from an array of genres including homily, autobiography, the novel, children's literature, and political and scientific discourse. Taken together, the essays argue persuasively that the existing canon must be expanded, that the protocols of interpretation must be transformed to make a prominent place for such issues as race, and that the problem of interpretation cannot be posed in the absence of theoretically informed modes of historical investigation.The Bounds of Race provides a subtle analysis of the variable role of racial ideologies and traces the interplay between hegemonic constraints and the strategies of resistance to them
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