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Blackness and the Color Black in 20Th-Century African-American Fiction

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Blackness and the Color Black in 20Th-Century African-American Fiction Synopsis

Nobody's skin is really black or white. Yet both terms are constantly used to classify people. Whiteness studies have revealed that 'white' must be considered as an ideological label that defines superiority and privilege. Conversely, 'black' came to mark inferiority and discrimination. This study explores how African-Americans responded to Anglo-Saxon race theory by adopting the originally demeaning assignation 'black' and turning it into the ideology of 'black' self-empowerment and racial pride. The analyses of eighteen novels from the African-American literary canon which focus on the significance of the color 'black' and the concept of blackness strongly suggest the importance of blackness studies while providing a close (re)reading of major works of 20th-century 'black' fiction.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9783631619629
Publication date:
Author: Barbara Haider
Publisher: Lang an imprint of Peter Lang GmbH, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
Format: Hardback
Pagination: 233 pages
Series: Mainzer Studien Zur Amerikanistik
Genres: Literary studies: c 1900 to c 2000
Regional / International studies