Chaotic Justice
John Ernest
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The University of North Carolina Press
Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Pädagogik
Beschreibung
What is African American about African American literature? Why identify it as a distinct tradition? John Ernest contends that too often scholars have relied on naive concepts of race, superficial conceptions of African American history, and the marginalization of important strains of black scholarship. With this book, he creates a new and just retelling of African American literary history that neither ignores nor transcends racial history.
Ernest revisits the work of nineteenth-century writers and activists such as Henry "Box" Brown, Frederick Douglass, Harriet Wilson, William Wells Brown, and Sojourner Truth, demonstrating that their concepts of justice were far more radical than those imagined by most white sympathizers. He sheds light on the process of reading, publishing, studying, and historicizing this work during the twentieth century. Looking ahead to the future of the field, Ernest offers new principles of justice that grant fragmented histories, partial recoveries, and still-unprinted texts the same value as canonized works. His proposal is both a historically informed critique of the field and an invigorating challenge to present and future scholars.
Kundenbewertungen
Black Studies, Henry Box Brown, African American autobiography, Harriet Wilson, antislavery, Frederick Douglass, William Still, abolitionism, American literature, Sojourner Truth, African American literature, slave narratives, slavery, William Wells Brown, Josiah Henson, race theory, Underground Railroad, Charles Stearns, William and Ellen Craft, racial history, racial science, Uncle Tom's Cabin, Civil War