Buch, Englisch, 238 Seiten, Format (B × H): 157 mm x 235 mm, Gewicht: 504 g
Urban Writing/Dwelling
Buch, Englisch, 238 Seiten, Format (B × H): 157 mm x 235 mm, Gewicht: 504 g
Reihe: Routledge Studies in African American Literature
ISBN: 978-1-032-45714-7
Verlag: Routledge
Comprehensive and comparative, this volume investigates African American street novelists since the Chicago Black Renaissance and the semiotic strategies they employ in publication, consumption, and depiction of street life. Divided into three chapters, this text analyzes the content, style, and ethics of “street” narrative through a discursive/rhetorical lens, exploring the development of street literature’s formal and contextual concerns to resolve the sociocultural and political questions surrounding cultural work. The book also gives emphasis to “text” or (post)structural literary analysis by answering questions about the genre’s aesthetic and linguistic techniques that respond to the injustices of urban planning. The last chapter, “Representation,” investigates the phenomenological hermeneutics of more recent street literature and its satire, highlighting the political stakes for authorship, credibility, and subjectivity. Through historical and contemporary studies of urban space, Blackness, and adaptations of street literature, this work attempts to network activists, artists, and scholars with the greater reading public by providing a functional ontology of reading the inner city.
Zielgruppe
Academic and Postgraduate
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
1. Introduction: Writing the Urban Dwelling
a. Black Literary Authenticity: Humanism versus Pessimism
b. Aims, Questions, and Methodologies
c. The Purpose of this Study
d. The Double-Edged Sword of Urban Sociology
e. Street Literature as Responding to the Urban Sociological Mythos
f. A Note on Interpretation and Value
2. Part I: Street
a. Chapter Synopsis
b. Introduction
c. Preparing to Read the Street
d. Street Literature at the Intersection of Blackness and Urbanization
e. The Street Novel: An Urban Differential in Literature
f. A Close Reading of Two Gen(d)erations in Street Novels: Iceberg Slim
g. A Close Reading of Two Gen(d)erations in Street Novels: Sister Souljah
h. Conclusion
3. Part II: Text
a. Chapter Synopsis
b. Introduction: Four Tropes of the Street-as-Text
c. Temporal Factors Affecting Tropological Semantics
d. Passing: A Comparative Reading of Himes, Beck, and Tyree
e. Peddling: A Comparative Reading of Autobiographical Street Fiction
f. Pandering: A Comparative Reading of Sexual Exchange and Economy
g. Preaching: A Comparative Reading of Demagogues and Messiahs
h. Rinehart’s Face(lessness): (De)constructing the Four Tropes
i. Rinehartism and the Author-Function Problem in Street Literature
j. Defining Rinehartism with Strong Semantics
k. Table 1: The Ontology of Rinehartism
l. Conclusion
4. Part III: Representation
a. Chapter Synopsis
b. Introduction
c. Language Structures the Expression of (Black) Being
d. Implications of Language that Frames Being-in-the-Street
e. The Ethical Work of Street Novels
f. Satirizing Street Publishing: Tyree and Everett
g. Satirizing Street Movements: The Fanonian Ontology of Wideman
h. Satirizing Street Culture: Beatty and Mansbach
i. The Postmodernism of Street Satire
j. Conclusion
5. Conclusion; or, Redefining Street Cultural Production
a. Introduction
b. Music
c. Image
d. Text
e. Praxis
f. Conclusion