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Commerce In Color Race Consumer Culture And American Literature 18931933 Class Culture James C Davis

  • SKU: BELL-2230020
Commerce In Color Race Consumer Culture And American Literature 18931933 Class Culture James C Davis
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Commerce In Color Race Consumer Culture And American Literature 18931933 Class Culture James C Davis instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Michigan Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 16.42 MB
Pages: 312
Author: James C. Davis
ISBN: 047206987X, 9780472069873, 0472099876
Language: English
Year: 2007

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Commerce In Color Race Consumer Culture And American Literature 18931933 Class Culture James C Davis by James C. Davis 047206987X, 9780472069873, 0472099876 instant download after payment.

Commerce in Color explores the juncture of consumer culture and race by examining advertising, literary texts, mass culture, and public events in the United States from 1893 to 1933. James C. Davis takes up a remarkable range of subjects—including the crucial role publishers Boni and Liveright played in the marketing of Harlem Renaissance literature, Henry James’s critique of materialism in The American Scene, and the commodification of racialized popular culture in James Weldon Johnson’s The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man—as he argues that racial thinking was central to the emergence of U.S. consumerism and, conversely, that an emerging consumer culture was a key element in the development of racial thinking and the consolidation of racial identity in America. By urging a reassessment of the familiar rubrics of the “culture of consumption” and the “culture of segregation,” Dawson poses new and provocative questions about American culture and social history.Both an influential literary study and an absorbing historical read, Commerce in Color proves that—in America—advertising, publicity, and the development of the modern economy cannot be understood apart from the question of race. “A welcome addition to existing scholarship, Davis’s study of the intersection of racial thinking and the emergence of consumer culture makes connections very few scholars have considered.”—James Smethurst, University of Massachusetts James C. Davis is Assistant Professor of English at Brooklyn College.

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