To be suddenly white : literary realism and racial passing

著者

    • Belluscio, Steven J.

書誌事項

To be suddenly white : literary realism and racial passing

Steven J. Belluscio

University of Missouri Press, c2006

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注記

Includes bibliographical references (p. 255-275) and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

"To Be Suddenly White" explores the troubled relationship between literary passing and literary realism, the dominant aesthetic motivation behind the late nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century ethnic texts considered in this study. Steven J Belluscio uses the passing narrative to provide insight into how the representation of ethnic and racial subjectivity granted humanity, dignity, and agency to the individuals portrayed. "To Be Suddenly White" offers new readings of traditional passing narratives from the African American literary tradition, such as James Weldon Johnson's "The Autobiography of an Ex-Coloured Man" and George Schuyler's "Black No More". It is also the first full-length work to consider a number of Jewish American and Italian American prose texts, such as Mary Antin's "The Promised Land" and Guido d'Agostino's "Olives on the Apple Tree", as racial passing narratives in their own right. When they are seen in comparison, ideological differences begin to emerge between African American passing narratives and "white ethnic" (Jewish American and Italian American) passing narratives. According to Belluscio, the former are more likely to engage in a direct critique of ideas of race, while the latter have a tendency to become more simplistic acculturation narratives in which a character moves from a position of ethnic difference to one of full American identity. Belluscio shows that these writers, even when overtly aware of the problematic nature of race, are also aware of the conditions it creates, the transformations it provokes, and the consequences of both. Belluscio elucidates the works' engagement with discourses of racial and ethnic differences, assimilation, passing, and identity, an approach that has profound implications for the understanding of American literary history.

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