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Human Contradictions in Octavia Butler's Work continues the
critical discussions of Butler's work by offering a variety of
theoretical perspectives and approaches to Butler's text. This
collection contains original essays that engage Butler's series
(Seed to Harvest, Xenogenesis, Parables), her stand-alone novels
(Kindred and Fledgling), and her short stories. The essays explore
new facets of Butler's work and its relevance to philosophy,
sociology, anthropology, psychology, cultural studies, ethnic
studies, women's studies, religious studies, American studies, and
U.S. history. The volume establishes new ways of reading this
seminal figure in African American literature, science fiction,
feminism, and popular culture.
Human Contradictions in Octavia Butler's Work continues the
critical discussions of Butler's work by offering a variety of
theoretical perspectives and approaches to Butler's text. This
collection contains original essays that engage Butler's series
(Seed to Harvest, Xenogenesis, Parables), her stand-alone novels
(Kindred and Fledgling), and her short stories. The essays explore
new facets of Butler's work and its relevance to philosophy,
sociology, anthropology, psychology, cultural studies, ethnic
studies, women's studies, religious studies, American studies, and
U.S. history. The volume establishes new ways of reading this
seminal figure in African American literature, science fiction,
feminism, and popular culture.
Authentic Blackness - "Real" Blackness explores and explains the
idea of authenticity, of "keeping it real," as it relates to the
multi-faceted meanings of blackness in the United States and the
world. Including reflections on hip-hop, comedy, literature,
intellectual history, and autobiography, the collection gives both
a broad overview of and intervenes in the debates concerning
blackness. A comprehensive introductory essay outlines the history
of the idea of "authentic blackness," while other chapters examine
the contours of blackness in Canada and Jamaica; the relationship
between middle-class status and "real" blackness; the link between
"blackness" and hip-hop culture; Dave Chappelle's comedy; and the
work of James Baldwin, Countee Cullen, Clarence Major, and John
Edgar Wideman as it comments on authenticity in relation to race.
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