
Ebook Info
- Published: 2012
- Number of pages: 192 pages
- Format: PDF
- File Size: 0.77 MB
- Authors: Kenneth W. Warren
Description
African American literature is over. With this provocative claim Kenneth Warren sets out to identify a distinctly African American literature―and to change the terms with which we discuss it.Rather than contest other definitions, Warren makes a clear and compelling case for understanding African American literature as creative and critical work written by black Americans within and against the strictures of Jim Crow America. Within these parameters, his book outlines protocols of reading that best make sense of the literary works produced by African American writers and critics over the first two-thirds of the twentieth century.In Warren’s view, African American literature begged the question: what would happen to this literature if and when Jim Crow was finally overthrown? Thus, imagining a world without African American literature was essential to that literature. In support of this point, Warren focuses on three moments in the history of Phylon, an important journal of African American culture. In the dialogues Phylon documents, the question of whether race would disappear as an organizing literary category emerges as shared ground for critical and literary practice. Warren also points out that while scholarship by black Americans has always been the province of a petit bourgeois elite, the strictures of Jim Crow enlisted these writers in a politics that served the race as a whole.Finally, Warren’s work sheds light on the current moment in which advocates of African American solidarity insist on a past that is more productively put behind us.
User’s Reviews
Editorial Reviews: Review “Is the idea that sustains the possibility of an African American literature today the belief that the welfare of the race as a whole depends on the success of black writers and those who are depicted in their texts, as Ken Warren suggests in this provocative new book? In compelling close readings of novels from George Schuyler’s Black No More to Michael Thomas’s Man Gone Down and in comprehensive engagements with major tendencies in literary criticism, What Was African American Literature? punctures contemporary assumptions about the role of black literature since the end of the Jim Crow regime that, Warren argues, provoked the literature’s emergence in the first place.”―Werner Sollors, Harvard University“What Was African American Literature? is undoubtedly one of the most provocative books on the texts and criticism of African American literature to appear within the past several years. The sophistication and range of its arguments further cement Warren’s stature as one of the leading thinkers of our time.”―Gene Jarrett, Boston University“A slight but forceful text with a pugnacious and elegantly presented thesis.”―Publishers Weekly“Most literary criticism today, under the sign of theory, is obscure and incomprehensible, and shies from presenting daring new ways to look at literature–when it engages with contemporary literature at all. Kenneth W. Warren’s book is an example of a book of literary criticism in elegant prose, completely accessible and jargon-free, yet making a sophisticated argument about a whole branch of literature, connecting politics and literature in a most exciting way.”―Anis Shivani, Huffington Post About the Author Kenneth W. Warren is Fairfax M. Cone Distinguished Service Professor of English at the University of Chicago.
Reviews from Amazon users which were colected at the time this book was published on the website:
⭐A must read by one of the great literary historians of our day.
⭐Seems controversial at first glance, but is actually a well-crafted response that pushes the field of American Literature out of its outdated racialized focus and into newer, more productive ground. For academic writing, easy to read and easy to teach.
⭐Shipment wasn’t as quick as I had hoped but it was inside of the dates I was given. Great book.
⭐Warren’s research eloquently presents how and why African American Literature has come to an end. African American Lit is examined as a historic organization of African American writings based on the mission and identity of the black experience during the Jim Crow era. No longer do the individual writings of African Americans reflect African American identity as a whole, nor are they only to be compared, compiled and shelved at your local bookstore by this definition. Black American authors now face the open field of art and authorship for the sake of itself. Defined, organized and compared by the literary world as the work itself demands. A stirring book, brave and thoughtful.
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