Research Catalog
The wanderer in African American literature
- Title
- The wanderer in African American literature / Gena E. Chandler.
- Author
- Chandler, Gena Elise
- Publication
- Knoxville : The University of Tennessee Press, [2020]
- ©2020
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Status | Format | Access | Call Number | Item Location |
---|---|---|---|---|
Available - Can be used on site. Please visit New York Public Library - Schomburg Center to submit a request in person. | Text | Use in library | Sc E 21-400 | Schomburg Center - Research & Reference |
Details
- Description
- x, 212 pages; 24 cm
- Summary
- The Wanderer in African American Literature highlights an enduring feature of African American letters: "From the slave narrative to Afrofuturism, the literature is populated, driven, and emboldened by wanderers who know no bounds." Gena E. Chandler argues that wanderers and the theme of wandering push the limits of narrative forms and challenge assumptions about the African American experience. The slave narratives of Olaudah Equiano and Harriet Jacobs echo eighteenth-and nineteenth-century literary traditions and chronicle journeys toward freedom and faith. Equiano traces his changing identity, integrating his native African culture with his adopted European one. Jacobs addresses the gender restrictions she faces as a slave and then a free woman whose progress in life remains uncertain and ongoing. Langston Hughes and Nella Larsen chronicle real and imagined journeys during the Harlem Renaissance and the Great Migration. Hughes's autobiography I Wonder as I Wander (1956) traces his global travels in the 1930s, highlighting his unique identity as a black American. Larsen's novel Quicksand (1928) follows its biracial heroine as she travels throughout the United States and to Denmark while navigating matters of race and gender. The protagonist of Richard Wright's The Outsider (1953) seeks individual freedom and a new identity but is "constrained within the boundaries of an American nation and a Western ideal that continuously views the black subject as outside and distinct from the modern project of advancement and freedom." In James Baldwin's Giovanni's Room (1956), the white protagonist flees America for France yet cannot escape difficult questions about sexuality and race. Finally, John Edgar Wideman's The Cattle Killing (1996) tells the story of two wanderers--an itinerant preacher spreading God's word during the Great Awakening and a twentieth-century writer on a journey of self-discovery about his identity and vocation. The former experiences a crisis of his Christian faith, and the latter endures a crisis of faith in his literary abilities. Tying these diverse threads together, Chandler demonstrates the power of the black narrative to assimilate and redeploy the literary trope of wanderlust, exchanging its premise of rootless drifting for something altogether more mobilizing. -- Publisher.
- Subject
- Genre/Form
- Criticism, interpretation, etc.
- Bibliography (note)
- Includes bibliographical references (pages [187]-197) and index.
- Contents
- Introduction: The Wanderer in African American literature -- Chapter one. Artful navigations: Equiano, Jacobs, and the wandering journey -- Chapter two. Reinventing Blackness: Hughes and Larsen as global wanderers -- Chapter three. The wanderer as cultural outsider: Wright and Baldwin at the margins -- Chapter four. Communion of faith: Redemptive (Re)Visions in John Edgar Wideman's The Cattle Killing -- Conclusion. Articulating a wandering cosmology in African American literature.
- Call Number
- Sc E 21-400
- ISBN
- 9781621905295
- 1621905292
- LCCN
- 2019013797
- OCLC
- 1109436377
- Author
- Chandler, Gena Elise, author.
- Title
- The wanderer in African American literature / Gena E. Chandler.
- Publisher
- Knoxville : The University of Tennessee Press, [2020]
- Copyright Date
- ©2020
- Edition
- First edition.
- Type of Content
- text
- Type of Medium
- unmediated
- Type of Carrier
- volume
- Bibliography
- Includes bibliographical references (pages [187]-197) and index.
- Local Note
- AUTH: VIRGINIA TECH.
- Research Call Number
- Sc E 21-400