Black Women Writers and the American Neo-Slave Narrative

Femininity Unfettered

Elizabeth A Beaulieu author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Published:30th Mar '99

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Black Women Writers and the American Neo-Slave Narrative cover

Close reading of several neo-slave narratives by contemporary black women writers, with emphasis on how these writers examine gender identity and depict motherhood as experienced by enslaved women.

This volume begins with an overview of historical representations of slavery in America. It examines individual neo-slave narratives and evaluates the influence of the neo-slave narrative on American literature, and on perceptions and misperceptions of African American women.The neo-slave narrative is an important development in American literary history and has serious revisionist intentions at its foundation. This book examines how contemporary African American women writers have shaped the genre. These authors have written neo-slave narratives to reinscribe history from the perspective of the African American woman, most specifically the nineteenth century enslaved mother. The writers considered in this study—Sherley Anne Williams, Toni Morrison, J. California Cooper, Gayl Jones, and Octavia Butler—explore American slavery through the lens of gender, both to interrogate the myth that enslaved women, denied the privilege of having a gender identity by the institution of slavery, were in fact genderless, and to celebrate the acts of resistance which enabled enslaved women to mother in the fullest sense of the term. The volume begins with an overview of historical representations of slavery in America, from the slave narrative itself to the revisionist scholarship of the 1960s. The book then examines several individual neo-slave narratives, such as Margaret Walker's Jubilee (1966), Williams' Dessa Rose (1986), Morrison's Beloved (1987), Cooper's Family (1991), Jones' Corregidora (1975), and Butler's Kindred (1979). What the women in these novels have in common is the fact that they mother; what the writers have in common is a tendency to utilize subversive strategies such as reversal, blurring, and the creation of myth to dramatize gender identity and to highlight the varied nature of motherhood as enslaved women experienced it. The final chapter evaluates the influence of the neo-slave narrative on American literature in general and on popular perceptions and misperceptions of African American women.

ISBN: 9780313308383

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 369g

200 pages