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Salvage Work Us And Caribbean Literatures Amid The Debris Of Legal Personhood 1st Edition Angela Naimou

  • SKU: BELL-5217128
Salvage Work Us And Caribbean Literatures Amid The Debris Of Legal Personhood 1st Edition Angela Naimou
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Salvage Work Us And Caribbean Literatures Amid The Debris Of Legal Personhood 1st Edition Angela Naimou instant download after payment.

Publisher: Fordham University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.01 MB
Pages: 304
Author: Angela Naimou
ISBN: 9780823264766, 0823264769
Language: English
Year: 2015
Edition: 1

Product desciption

Salvage Work Us And Caribbean Literatures Amid The Debris Of Legal Personhood 1st Edition Angela Naimou by Angela Naimou 9780823264766, 0823264769 instant download after payment.

Salvage Work examines contemporary literary responses to the law's construction of personhood in the Americas. Tracking the extraordinary afterlives of the legal slave personality from the nineteenth century into the twenty-first, Angela Naimou shows the legal slave to be a fractured but generative figure for contemporary legal personhood across categories of race, citizenship, gender, and labor. What emerges is a compelling and original study of how law invents categories of identification and how literature contends with the person as a legal fiction. Through readings of Francisco Goldman's The Ordinary Seaman, Edwidge Danticat's Krik?Krak!, Rosario Ferre's Sweet Diamond Dust (Maldito Amor), Gayl Jones's Song for Anninho and Mosquito, and John Edgar Wideman's Fanon, Naimou shows how literary engagements with legal personhood reconfigure formal narrative conventions in Black Atlantic historiography, the immigrant novel, the anticolonial romance, the trope of the talking book, and the bildungsroman.
Revealing links between colonial, civic, slave, labor, immigration, and penal law, Salvage Work reframes debates over civil and human rights by revealing the shared hemispheric histories and effects of legal personhood across seemingly disparate identities-including the human and the corporate person, the political refugee and the economic migrant, and the stateless person and the citizen.
In depicting the material remains of the legal slave personality in the de-industrialized neoliberal era, these literary texts develop a salvage aesthetic that invites us to rethink our political and aesthetic imagination of personhood. Questioning liberal frameworks for civil and human rights as well as what Naimou calls death-bound theories of personhood-in which forms of human life are primarily described as wasted, disposable, bare, or dead in law-Salvage Work thus responds to critical discussions of biopolitics and neoliberal globalization by exploring the potential for contemporary literature to reclaim the individual from the legal regimes that have marked her.

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