|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
This study of the construction of race in American culture takes
its title from a central story thread in Mark Twain's Adventures of
Huckleberry Finn. Huck, who resolves to ""go to hell"" rather than
turn over the runaway slave Jim, in time betrays his companion.
Jeff Abernathy assesses cross-racial pairings in American
literature following Huckleberry Finn to show that this pattern of
engagement and betrayal appears repeatedly in our fiction?notably
southern fiction?just as it appears throughout American history and
culture. He contends that such stories of companionship and
rejection express opposing tenets of American culture: a persistent
vision of democracy and the racial hierarchy that undermines it.
Abernathy traces this pattern through works by William Faulkner,
Carson McCullers, Harper Lee, Kaye Gibbons, Sara Flanigan,
Elizabeth Spencer, Padgett Powell, Ellen Douglas, and Glasgow
Phillips. He then demonstrates how African American writers
pointedly contest the pattern. The works of Ralph Ellison, Alice
Walker, and Richard Wright, for example, ""portray autonomous black
characters and white characters who must earn their own salvation,
or gain it not at all.
This study of the construction of race in American culture takes
its title from a central story thread in Mark Twain's "Adventures
of Huckleberry Finn". Huck, who resolves to "go to hell" rather
than turn over the runaway slave Jim, in time betrays his
companion. Jeff Abernathy assesses cross-racial pairings in
American literature following "Huckleberry Finn" to show that this
pattern of engagement and betrayal appears repeatedly in American
fiction - notably southern fiction - just as it appears throughout
American history and culture. He contends that such stories of
companionship and rejection express opposing tenets of American
culture: a persistent vision of democracy and the racial hierarchy
that undermines it. Abernathy traces this pattern through works by
William Faulkner, Carson McCullers, Harper Lee, Kaye Gibbons, Sara
Flanigan, Elizabeth Spencer, Padgett Powell, Ellen Douglas, and
Glasgow Phillips. He then demonstrates how African American writers
pointedly contest the pattern. The works of Ralph Ellison, Alice
Walker, and Richard Wright, for example, "portray autonomous black
characters and white characters who must earn their own salvation,
or gain it not at all".
|
|