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Connecting Times - The Sixties in Afro-American Fiction (Paperback)
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Connecting Times - The Sixties in Afro-American Fiction (Paperback)
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This stimulating study of black literature of the 1960s is an
analysis of a period of American history through the literary art
it produced. In Connecting Times Norman Harris focuses on how
Afro-Americans involved in the Civil Rights Movement, the Black
Power movement, or the Vietnam War either failed or achieved in
making sense of their lives when the goals they struggled for were
not accomplished. In seven novels whose plot and characterization
are determined by one or more of these major historical events --
Meridian, Look What They Done to My Song, The Cotillion or One Good
Bull is Half the Herd, The Last Days of Louisiana Red, Captain
Blackman, Coming Home, and Tragic Magic -- Harris finds the basis
for his interpretations, and he finds the place of these novels
likewise in the context of historical writings of the 1960s.
Central to Harris's analysis of history through literature is the
idea of the quest myth that permeates Afro-American culture.
According to Robert Stepto, the quest is for freedom and literacy,
freedom as an end to slavery and literacy as the ability to read,
write, and indeed to interpret cultural signs. For those
Afro-Americans attuned to their culture this symbolic meaning
manifests a collective significance for Afro-American cultural
symbols. It is these whom Harris considers truly literate. He
extends his concept of freedom to knowledge of the many options
available in the reservoir of Afro-American history. This freedom
is knowledge of racial memory, and one's awareness of this racial
memory and its effect upon individuals in confrontational
situations determines one's degree of literacy. It is these
definitions of freedom and literacy and the Afro-American quest for
them that Harris applies in his analysis of literature set against
the historical backdrop of Civil Rights, Black Power, and Vietnam.
This study of American social history under the illuminating ray of
the novels rising out of the black struggle for freedom and
literacy offers valuable insights and new interpretations for a
pivotal time in the United States.
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