Anne, the white woman in contemporary African-American fiction : archetypes stereotypes, and characterizations

Bibliographic Information

Anne, the white woman in contemporary African-American fiction : archetypes stereotypes, and characterizations

Anna Maria Chupa

(Contributions in Afro-American and African studies, no. 133)

Greenwood Press, 1990

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Note

Bibliography: p. [143]-146

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Although many books in the last decade have dealt with the unique mythic forms of African-American literature, and others have applied Jungian theory to literary criticism in general, none have attempted to combine the two strands. This volume does just that, applying Jungian archetypal theory and certain West African religious principles to the analysis of fictional characterizations of white women. Using Calvin Hernton's Sex and Racism in America in the development of women's stereotypes, Anna Maria Chupa adds a mythic interpretation to these characters, while at the same time recognizing that the social context that informs the stereotypes creates the imagery through which archetypes are manifest. In this way, she is able to analyze both the particular stereotypes of white women and their mythical roles. The book constructs its analysis around the discussions of the different stereotypes. The destructive bitch, the confidant-sage, the benevolent witch, and other mythic and social types are treated in a context that is neither purely African nor European, but a combination of both. Works addressed include Baraka's The Dutchman, Ellison's Inivisible Man, Himes's If He Hollers Let Him Go, Wright's Native Son, and Walker's The Color Purple. The work concludes with a bibliography and a comprehensive index. This book will be useful for courses in African-American fiction, women in literature, and myth and literature, as well as an important addition to college and university libraries.

Table of Contents

Preface Introduction The Terrible Goddess: The Destructive Bitch The Benevolent Witch and Insanity: Mother, Virgin, Whore Social Stereotypes Polarity: The Stereotype and the Archetype--Breaking Boundaries Separating the Archetype and the Stereotype Between the Archetype and the Stereotype: Mediation and the Transcendent Syzygy White Trash: Depravity and Deformity Thrill Seekers, "Slummers" and Social Affectations The Exiled and the "White-Negro" Woman The Empty Woman and the Object The Confidant-Sage Cover Your Mirrors at Night to Keep the Nightmare Away Bibliography Index

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