Reading contemporary Black British and African American women writers : race, ethics, narrative form
by
 
George, Sheldon, 1973- editor.

Title
Reading contemporary Black British and African American women writers : race, ethics, narrative form

Author
George, Sheldon, 1973- editor.

ISBN
9780429581359
 
9780429583254
 
9780429579134
 
9780429199271

Edition
1st.

Physical Description
1 online resource.

Series
Narrative theory and culture

General Note

Introduction: Narrative Theory and Contemporary Black Women Writers
Jean Wyatt and Sheldon George

Part 1: African American Women Writers: Narrative Form, Race, Ethics

Chapter 1. At the Crossroads of Form and Ideology: Disidentification in Claudia Rankine's Citizen
Catherine Romagnolo, Professor of English, Lebanon Valley College, USA

Chapter 2. "She was miraculously neutral": Feeling, Ethics and Metafiction in Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie's Americanah
Jennifer Terry, Associate Professor of English, Durham University, UK

Chapter 3. Ableism and the Reproduction of Racial Difference in Nella Larsen's Passing and Toni Morrison's "Recitatif"
Milo Obourn, Associate Professor of English, Brockport State University, USA

Chapter 4. "When We Speak of Otherness": Narrative Unreliability and the Ethics of Othering in Toni Morrison's Jazz and Home
Herman Beavers, Professor of English and Africana Studies, University of Pennsylvania, USA

Chapter 5. Learning to Listen in Jesmyn Ward's Sing, Unburied, Sing
Stephanie Li, Professor of English, Indiana University Bloomington, USA

Chapter 6. Maternal Sovereignty: Destruction and Survival in Jesmyn Ward's Salvage the Bones
Naomi Morgenstern, Associate Professor of English and American Literature, University of Toronto, Canada

Chapter 7. Narrating the Raced Subject: Toni Morrison's Jazz and the Literature of Modernism
Sheldon George, Professor of English, Simmons University, USA

Part 2: Black British Women Writers: Narrative Form, Race, Ethics

Chapter 8. Swing Time: Zadie Smith's Aesthetic of Active Ambivalence

Daphne Lamothe, Associate Professor Africana Studies, Smith College, USA

Chapter 9. Zadie Smith's Narratives of the Absurd: A Social Vision Represented through Humor
Sarah Ilott, Lecturer in English and Film, Manchester Metropolitan University, UK

Chapter 10. Buchi Emecheta: Storyteller, Sociologist, and Citizen of the World
Pamela Bromberg, Professor of English, Simmons University, USA

Chapter 11. "Where are you (really) from?" Transgender ethics, ethics of unknowing, and transformative adoption in Jackie Kay's Trumpet and Toni Morrison's Jazz
Pelagia Goulimari, English, University of Oxford, UK

Chapter 12. White Allyship and Narrative Dissonance in Andrea Levy's Small Island
Agata Szczeszak-Brewer, Professor of English, Wabash College, USA

Chapter 13: "Civis Romana sum": Bernardine Evaristo's The Emperor's Babe and the Emancipatory Poetics of (Multi-) Cultural Citizenship
Deirdre Osborne (Reader in English Literature, Goldsmiths, University of London)

Chapter 14. Reinventing the Gothic in Oyeyemi's White is for Witching: Maternal Ethics and Racial Politics
Jean Wyatt, Professor of English, Occidental College, USA


Subject Term
English fiction -- Black authors -- History and criticism.
 
English fiction -- Women authors -- History and criticism.
 
American fiction -- African American women authors -- History and criticism.
 
Narration (Rhetoric)
 
Race in literature.
 
Ethics in literature.
 
LITERARY CRITICISM / American / African-American
 
LITERARY CRITICISM / European / English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh
 
LITERARY CRITICISM / Women Authors

Added Author
George, Sheldon, 1973-
 
Wyatt, Jean,

Electronic Access
Taylor & Francis https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/9780429199271
 
OCLC metadata license agreement http://www.oclc.org/content/dam/oclc/forms/terms/vbrl-201703.pdf


LibraryMaterial TypeItem BarcodeShelf Number[[missing key: search.ChildField.HOLDING]]Status
Online LibraryE-Book570955-1001PR120 .B55Taylor Fransic E-Kitap Koleksiyonu