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Dividing Lines Class Anxiety And Postbellum Black Fiction Andre N Williams

  • SKU: BELL-10983262
Dividing Lines Class Anxiety And Postbellum Black Fiction Andre N Williams
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Dividing Lines Class Anxiety And Postbellum Black Fiction Andre N Williams instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Michigan Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.44 MB
Pages: 232
Author: Andreá N. Williams
ISBN: 9780472036745, 0472036742
Language: English
Year: 2016

Product desciption

Dividing Lines Class Anxiety And Postbellum Black Fiction Andre N Williams by Andreá N. Williams 9780472036745, 0472036742 instant download after payment.

One of the most extensive studies of class in nineteenth-century African American literature to date, Dividing Lines unveils how black fiction writers represented the uneasy relationship between class differences, racial solidarity, and the quest for civil rights in black communities. By portraying complex, highly stratified communities with a growing black middle class, these authors dispelled notions that black Americans were uniformly poor or uncivilized. The book argues that the signs of class anxiety are embedded in postbellum fiction: from the verbal stammer or prim speech of class-conscious characters to fissures in the fiction's form. Andreá N. Williams delves into the familiar and lesser-known works of Frances E. W. Harper, Pauline Hopkins, Charles W. Chesnutt, Sutton Griggs, and Paul Laurence Dunbar, showing how these texts mediate class through discussions of labor, moral respectability, ancestry, spatial boundaries, and skin complexion. Dividing Lines also draws on reader responses—from book reviews, editorials, and letters—to show how the class anxiety expressed in African American fiction directly sparked reader concerns over the status of black Americans in the U.S. social order. Weaving literary history with compelling textual analyses, this study yields new insights about the intersection of race and class in black novels and short stories from the 1880s to 1900s.


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