Reimagining the Middle Passage

Reimagining the Middle Passage
Title Reimagining the Middle Passage PDF eBook
Author Tara T. Green
Publisher
Total Pages 180
Release 2018
Genre Drama
ISBN 9780814254714

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Examines how contemporary Black artists envision the Middle Passage as an original site of social death and a space of potential rebirth.

Middle Passage

Middle Passage
Title Middle Passage PDF eBook
Author Charles Johnson
Publisher Simon and Schuster
Total Pages 229
Release 2012-02-21
Genre Fiction
ISBN 1439125031

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A twenty-fifth anniversary edition of Charles Johnson’s National Book Award-winning masterpiece—"a novel in the tradition of Billy Budd and Moby-Dick…heroic in proportion…fiction that hooks the mind" (The New York Times Book Review)—now with a new introduction from Stanley Crouch. Rutherford Calhoun, a newly freed slave and irrepressible rogue, is lost in the underworld of 1830s New Orleans. Desperate to escape the city’s unscrupulous bill collectors and the pawing hands of a schoolteacher hellbent on marrying him, he jumps aboard the Republic, a slave ship en route to collect members of a legendary African tribe, the Allmuseri. Thus begins a voyage of metaphysical horror and human atrocity, a journey which challenges our notions of freedom, fate and how we live together. Peopled with vivid and unforgettable characters, nimble in its interplay of comedy and serious ideas, this dazzling modern classic is a perfect blend of the picaresque tale, historical romance, sea yarn, slave narrative and philosophical allegory. Now with a new introduction from renowned writer and critic Stanley Crouch, this twenty-fifth anniversary edition of Middle Passage celebrates a cornerstone of the American canon and the masterwork of one of its most important writers. "Long after we’d stopped believe in the great American novel, along comes a spellbinding adventure story that may be just that" (Chicago Tribune).

Staging Black Fugitivity

Staging Black Fugitivity
Title Staging Black Fugitivity PDF eBook
Author Stacie Selmon McCormick
Publisher Black Performance and Cultural
Total Pages 192
Release 2019-09-09
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 9780814255445

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Argues that contemporary black dramas use the slave past to complicate views of the history of slavery, of the realities of racial progress, and of black subjectivity.

Reimagining Resistance in Gisèle Pineau’s Works

Reimagining Resistance in Gisèle Pineau’s Works
Title Reimagining Resistance in Gisèle Pineau’s Works PDF eBook
Author Lisa Connell
Publisher Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages 227
Release 2022-10-20
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1666911003

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As one of the most prominent voices from and about the French Caribbean, Gisèle Pineau has garnered significant scholarly attention; however, this interest has culminated in precious few volumes devoted entirely to the author and her work. In response to this lack of in-depth critical attention, Reimagining Resistance in Gisèle Pineau’s Works brings together a range of perspectives from both sides of the Atlantic and across the Pacific to explore the unique ways in which Gisèle Pineau’s works redefine the concept of resistance, particularly as it relates to gender, race, history, and Antillean identity. As this volume ultimately demonstrates, resistance holds up a mirror to the political, economic, and cultural forces that have shaped the past, construct the present, and build the future. It argues that Pineau’s characters open the narrative frame for reading them and move us beyond the categories of the wholly defiant or the inherently complicit. Above all, as they invite us to reimagine resistance, they expose our expectations and hopefully shift our understanding about what it means to rise and to fall in a world we seek to call our own.

Migration, Diaspora, Exile

Migration, Diaspora, Exile
Title Migration, Diaspora, Exile PDF eBook
Author Daniel Stein
Publisher Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages 309
Release 2020-05-27
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1793617015

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Migration is the most volatile sociopolitical issue of our time, as the current escalation of discourse and action in the United States and Europe concerning walls, border security, refugee camps, and deportations indicates. The essays by the international and interdisciplinary group of scholars assembled in this volume offer critical filters suggesting that this escalation and its historical precedents do not preclude redemptive counterstrategies. Encoded in narratives of affiliation and escape, these counterstrategies are variously launched as literary, cinematic, and civic interventions in past and present constructions of diasporic, migratory, or exilic identities. The essays trace these narratives through the figure of the “exile” as it moves across times, borders, and genres, transmogrifying into the fugitive, the escapee, the refugee, the nomad, the Other. Arguing that narratives and figures of migration to and in Europe and the Americas share tropes that link migration to kinship, community, refuge, and hegemony, the volume identifies a transhistorical, transcultural, and transnational common ground for experiences of mediated diaspora, migration, and exile at a time when public discourse and policy-making emphasize borders, divisions, and violent confrontations.

Bodies of Water in African American Literature, Music, and Film

Bodies of Water in African American Literature, Music, and Film
Title Bodies of Water in African American Literature, Music, and Film PDF eBook
Author Sharon A. Lewis
Publisher Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Total Pages 160
Release 2023-05-04
Genre Music
ISBN 1527502112

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This is an edited volume of original essays which explore the meaning of bodies of water in creative narratives by African Americans. The contributors explore the representations of still and moving waterbodies across several genres of literature, film, and music. They also deploy socio-historical and environmental theories, in addition to close-reading interpretive strategies, all acknowledging and developing traditional ways of thinking about water in relation to African American experience and culture. The writers gathered here showcase insightful and vigorous research in various art forms, and, together, embody provocative, innovative and refreshing ways to contemplate water in Black American artistic expressivity.

Black Age

Black Age
Title Black Age PDF eBook
Author Habiba Ibrahim
Publisher NYU Press
Total Pages 269
Release 2021-09-14
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN 1479810894

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"Black Age argues that age tracks the struggle between the abuses of black exclusion from western humanism, and the reclamation of non-normative black life"--