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Desegregating Desire Race And Sexuality In Cold War American Literature 1st Edition Tyler T Schmidt

  • SKU: BELL-51249974
Desegregating Desire Race And Sexuality In Cold War American Literature 1st Edition Tyler T Schmidt
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Desegregating Desire Race And Sexuality In Cold War American Literature 1st Edition Tyler T Schmidt instant download after payment.

Publisher: University Press of Mississippi
File Extension: EPUB
File size: 2.14 MB
Pages: 288
Author: Tyler T. Schmidt
ISBN: 9781621039464, 1621039463
Language: English
Year: 2013
Edition: 1

Product desciption

Desegregating Desire Race And Sexuality In Cold War American Literature 1st Edition Tyler T Schmidt by Tyler T. Schmidt 9781621039464, 1621039463 instant download after payment.

A study of race and sexuality and their interdependencies in American literature from 1945 to 1955, Desegregating Desire examines the varied strategies used by eight American poets and novelists to integrate sexuality into their respective depictions of desegregated places and emergent identities in the aftermath of World War II. Focusing on both progressive and conventional forms of cross-race writing and interracial intimacy, the book is organized around four pairs of writers. Chapter one examines reimagined domestic places, and the ambivalent desires that define them, in the southern writing of Elizabeth Bishop and Zora Neale Hurston. The second chapter; focused on poets Gwendolyn Brooks and Edwin Denby, analyzes their representations of the postwar American city, representations which often transpose private desires into a public imaginary. Chapter three explores how insular racial communities in the novels of Ann Petry and William Demby were related to non-normative sexualities emerging in the early Cold War. The final chapter, focused on damaged desires, considers the ways that novelists Jo Sinclair and Carl Offord, relocate the public traumas of desegregation with the private spheres of homes and psyches. Aligning close textual readings with the segregated histories and interracial artistic circles that informed these Cold War writers, this project defines desegregation as both a racial and sexual phenomenon, one both public and private. In analyzing more intimate spaces of desegregation shaped by regional, familial, and psychological upheavals after World War II, Tyler T. Schmidt argues that "queer" desire--understood as same-sex and interracial desire--redirected American writing and helped shape the Cold War era's integrationist politics.

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