Cultural Haunting: Ghosts and Ethnicity in Recent American Literature / Edition 1

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Overview

Ghost stories in various forms have been a part of popular literature for centuries, from Shakespeare to Dickens to Faulkner. Over the past twenty-five years, a resurgence of haunting plots has occurred in American literature. In Cultural Haunting, Kathleen Brogan makes the case that this recent preoccupation with ghosts stems not from a lingering interest in Gothic themes but instead from a whole new genre in American literature that she calls "the story of cultural haunting."

Examining Louis Erdrich's Tracks, Toni Morrison's Beloved, and Cristina Garcia's Dreaming in Cuba, Brogan argues that modern ghost stories offer a way for minority authors to come to terms with their lost cultural identities. At the heart of this process, she contends, is the experience of mourning as that form of memory determined by an awareness of a break with the past. While conscious of the cultural differences among these haunted tales of slavery, colonization, and immigration, the author demonstrates that they all function similarly: to re-create ethnic identity by imaginatively recovering a collective history that in many cases has been fragmented or erased. Her readings show how the specific histories and local meanings support the pan-ethnic genre she has defined.

The book suggests that modern stories of haunting reflect the increased emphasis on ethnic and racial differentation in American society over the past thirty years. The ghosts found in contemporary American literature lead us to the heart of our nation's discourse about multiculturalism and ethnic identity.

University of Virginia Press

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Editorial Reviews

Thomas J. Ferraro

Cultural Haunting is a superb genre study of value to anyone teaching or writing in the growing field of contemporary literature. Brogan's writing is clear, supple, and entrancing throughout; her research is rock solid. This book has the best features of a scholarly critical monograph without destroying the literary magic in its care.

Booknews
Brogan (English, Wellesley College) studies the cultural hauntings in Tracks by Louise Erdrich, Beloved by Toni Morrison, and Dreaming in Cuban by Cristina Garcia. She argues that modern ghost stories offer a way for minority writers to come to terms with their lost cultural identities. The final chapter deals with ethnic mourning and memory. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.
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Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780813918273
  • Publisher: University of Virginia Press
  • Publication date: 1/28/1999
  • Edition description: 1 ED
  • Edition number: 1
  • Pages: 228
  • Product dimensions: 6.00 (w) x 9.00 (h) x 0.80 (d)

Meet the Author

Kathleen Brogan is Associate Professor of English at Wellesley College.

University of Virginia Press

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Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
1 Haunted Tales of Heirs and Ethnographers 1
2 Ghost Dancing: Cultural Translation in Louise Erdrich's Tracks 30
3 Getting Back One's Dead for Burial: Traumatic History and Ritual Reburial in Toni Morrison's Beloved 61
4 From Exiles to Americans: "Recombinant" Ethnicity in Cristina Garcia's Dreaming in Cuban 93
Ethnic Memory, Ethnic Mourning 129
Notes 173
Bibliography 205
Index 221
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