Reading Africa into American Literature: Epics, Fables, and Gothic Tales

Reading Africa into American Literature: Epics, Fables, and Gothic Tales

by Keith Cartwright
Reading Africa into American Literature: Epics, Fables, and Gothic Tales

Reading Africa into American Literature: Epics, Fables, and Gothic Tales

by Keith Cartwright

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Overview

Keith Cartwright examines the literature of W.E.B. DuBois, Alex Haley, Zora Neale Hurston, William Faulkner, Ralph Ellison, Toni Morrison, and many others, placing these noted authors' works in the context of the history, folklore, linguistics, and politics from which they emerged. He traces the historical routes and semiotic systems by which one may recognize essentially African elements in the mainstream of American culture. Reading Africa into American Literature reveals that America's foundational African presence, along with a complex set of reactions to it, is an integral but unacknowledged source of the national culture, identity, and literature.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780813189949
Publisher: University Press of Kentucky
Publication date: 12/14/2021
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 280
File size: 504 KB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Keith Cartwright, assistant professor of English at Roanoke College in Roanoke, Virginia, was a Peace Corps volunteer in Senegal.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Tropical Trees: Towards a Hippikat Poetics1
Part I.Epic Impulses/Narratives of Ancestry
1.Imperial Mother Wit, Gumbo Erotics: From Sunjata to The Souls of Black Folk25
2.Of Root Figures and Buggy Jiving: Toomer, Hurston, and Ellison48
3.Myth-making, Mother-child-ness, and Epic Renamings: Malcolm X, Kunta Kinte, and Milkman Dead68
Part II.Bound Cultures/The Creolization of Dixie
4."Two Heads Fighting": African Roots, Geechee/Gombo Tales93
5.Creole Self-Fashioning: Joel Chandler Harris's "Other Fellow"114
6.Searching for Spiritual Soil: Milk Bonds and the "Maumer Tongue"130
Part III.Shadows of Africans/Gothic Representations
7.The Spears of the Party of the Merciful: Senegambian Muslims, Scriptural Mercy, and Plantation Slavery157
8.Babo and Bras Coupe: Malign Machinations, Gothic Plots181
9."Never Once but Like Ripples": On Boomeranging Trumps, Rememory, and the Novel as Medium203
Notes231
Works Cited241
Index259
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