Offering a revolutionary way of reading 19th-century slave
narratives, Fishburn seeks to recover the philosophical foundations
of African American literature. Underlying slave narrative is an
expression of the problem of physical embodiment; that is, the
dualistic thinking of the mind-body division. Fishburn's work
uncovers the tension between needing to acknowledge the fact of
human embodiment and wishing to overcome its consequences in a
racist society. One of the strongest points made by this pioneering
work is the controversial claim that these slave narratives offer
one of the most telling, if largely overlooked, pre-Heideggerian
critiques of liberal humanism ever attempted in the West.
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