The process of naming is a transformative act that inherently
imparts meaning, whether it be through the conscious use of a
familiar historical or allegorical appellation or through the
creation of a new word. Critics have often noted the importance of
names and naming in African-American literature, but Debra Walker
King's Deep Talk is the first methodological discussion of the
process. In this original study, the author seeks out the
discourses existing beneath the primary narratives of these
literary texts by interpreting the significance of certain
character names.
King explores what she calls the "metatext" of names, an
interpretive realm where these chosen words offer up symbolic,
metaphoric, and other meanings, often simultaneously. Literary
names can thus revise and comment upon the surface action of a
novel by giving voice to unspoken themes and events, a process
known as "deep talk." Drawing on the work of Kristeva, Bakhtin, and
Henry Louis Gates Jr., the author explains the interpretive
guidelines necessary to read "deep talk" in African-American texts.
She applies these guidelines to texts by Ralph Ellison, Zora Neale
Hurston, Toni Morrison, James Baldwin, and Alice Walker, among
others.
Perhaps most important, King reveals how the process of naming
became a form of empowerment for African Americans, a way of both
reclaiming black identity and resisting conventions of white
society. Black men and women whose ancestors were stripped of their
identity through the Middle Passage and during slavery embraced the
incantatory power of names and have long used this power to defend
themselves from the effects of racism, sexism, and classism.
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