African American literature and the classicist tradition : Black women writers from Wheatley to Morrison
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
African American literature and the classicist tradition : Black women writers from Wheatley to Morrison
Palgrave Macmillan, 2007
1st ed
- : hbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [183]-194) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This is a groundbreaking study exploring the significant relationship between western classical mythology and African American women's literature. A comparative analysis of classical revisions by eighteenth and nineteenth century Black women writers Phillis Wheatley and Pauline Hopkins and twentieth century writers Gwendolyn Brooks, Toni Morrison, and Rita Dove reveals that Black women writers revise specific classical myths for artistic and political agency. The study demonstrates that women rework myth to represent mythical stories from the Black female perspective and to counteract denigrating contemporary cultural and social myths that disempower and devalue Black womanhood. Through their adaptations of classical myths about motherhood, Wheatley, Ray, Brooks, Morrison, and Dove uncover the shared experiences of mythic mothers and their contemporary African American counterparts thus offering a unique Black feminist perspective to classicism. The women also use myth as a liberating space where they can 'speak the unspeakable' and empower their subjects as well as themselves.
Table of Contents
Writing the Classics Black: The Poetic and Political Function of Classical Revision in the Works of Gwendolyn Brooks, Toni Morrison, and Rita Dove Historical Overview of Ancient and Contemporary Representations of Classical Mythology Classical Discourse as Political Agency: African-American Revisionist Mythmaking by Phillis Wheatley, Henrietta Cordelia Ray, and Pauline Hopkins Gwendolyn Brooks' Racialization of the Persephone and Demeter Myth Toni Morrison's Classical Fusion Rita Dove's Mother Love: A Return to Form
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