Spelling suggestions: "subject:"interracialism"" "subject:"interracialism's""
1 |
Violent Disruptions: Richard Wright and William Faulkner's Racial ImaginationsChavers, Linda Doris Mariah 10 October 2014 (has links)
Violent Disruptions contends that the works of Richard Wright and William Faulkner are mirror images of each other and that each illustrates American race relations in distinctly powerful and prescient ways. While Faulkner portrays race and American identity through sex and its relationship to the imagination, Wright reveals a violent undercurrent beneath interracial encounters that the shared imagination triggers. Violent Disruptions argues that the spectacle of the interracial body anchors the cultural imaginations of our collective society and, as it embodies and symbolizes American slavery, drives the violent acts of individuals. Interracial productions motivate the narratives of Richard Wright and William Faulkner through a system of displacement of signs. Though these tropes maintain their currency today, they are borne out of cultural imaginings over two hundred years old. Working within the framework of the imaginary, Violent Disruptions places these now historical texts into the twenty-first century's discourse of race and American identity. / African and African American Studies
|
2 |
Miscegenated Narration: The Effects of Interracialism in Women's Popular Sentimental Romances from the Civil War YearsBeeler, Connie 05 1900 (has links)
Critical work on popular American women's fiction still has not reckoned adequately with the themes of interracialism present in these novels and with interracialism's bearing on the sentimental. This thesis considers an often overlooked body of women's popular sentimental fiction, published from 1860-1865, which is interested in themes of interracial romance or reproduction, in order to provide a fuller picture of the impact that the intersection of interracialism and sentimentalism has had on American identity. By examining the literary strategy of "miscegenated narration," or the heteroglossic cacophony of narrative voices and ideological viewpoints that interracialism produces in a narrative, I argue that the hegemonic ideologies of the sentimental romance are both "deterritorialized" and "reterritorialized," a conflicted impulse that characterizes both nineteenth-century sentimental, interracial romances and the broader project of critiquing the dominant national narrative that these novels undertake.
|
3 |
Nation, miscegenation, and the myth of the Mulatta/o Monster 1859-1886Murphy, Jessica Alexandra Maeve January 2009 (has links)
No description available.
|
4 |
Nation, miscegenation, and the myth of the Mulatta/o Monster 1859-1886Murphy, Jessica Alexandra Maeve January 2009 (has links)
Thèse numérisée par la Division de la gestion de documents et des archives de l'Université de Montréal
|
Page generated in 0.079 seconds