Til hovedinnhold
Norli Bokhandel

Outside Literary Studies - Black Criticism and the University

2022, Heftet, Engelsk

329,-

3 for 2 på engelsk
På fjernlager – sendes innen 6-12 virkedager
  • Gratis frakt på ordre fra 299,-
  • Bytt i 200 butikker
  • Ikke tilgjengelig for hent i butikk
A timely reconsideration of the history of the profession, Outside Literary Studies investigates how midcentury Black writers built a critical practice tuned to the struggle against racism and colonialism.   This striking contribution to Black literary studies examines the practices of Black writers in the mid-twentieth century to revise our understanding of the institutionalization of literary studies in America. Andy Hines uncovers a vibrant history of interpretive resistance to university-based New Criticism by Black writers of the American left. These include well-known figures such as Langston Hughes and Lorraine Hansberry as well as still underappreciated writers like Melvin B. Tolson and Doxey Wilkerson. In their critical practice, these and other Black writers levied their critique from “outside” venues: behind the closed doors of the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, in the classroom at a communist labor school under FBI surveillance, and in a host of journals. From these vantages, Black writers not only called out the racist assumptions of the New Criticism, but also defined Black literary and interpretive practices to support communist and other radical world-making efforts in the mid-twentieth century. Hines’s book thus offers a number of urgent contributions to literary studies: it spotlights a canon of Black literary texts that belong to an important era of anti-racist struggle, and it fills in the pre-history of the rise of Black studies and of ongoing Black dissent against the neoliberal university.

Produktegenskaper

  • Forfatter

  • Bidragsyter

    Dr. Andy Hines (Forfatter)
  • Forlag/utgiver

    University of Chicago Press
  • Format

    Heftet
  • Språk

    Engelsk
  • Utgivelsesår

    2022
  • Antall sider

    256
  • EAN

    9780226818580

Kundeanmeldelser

Frakt og levering