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Journeys and Journals
(Englisch)
Women's Mystery Writing and Migration in the African Diaspora
Allen, Carol

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Produktbeschreibung

Using literary criticism, theory, and sociohistoric data, this book brings into conversation black migrations with mystery novels by African American women, novels which explore fully the psychic, economic, and spiritual impact of mass migratory movements.

Using literary criticism, theory, and sociohistoric data, this book brings into conversation black migrations with mystery novels by African American women, novels which explore fully the psychic, economic, and spiritual impact of mass migratory movements. Diaspora travel has been forced and selected and has extended from the Slave Trade through the contemporary moment, causing the black subject to wrestle with motion, the self in motion, the community in motion, the spirit in motion, culture in motion, and especially the past in motion. Reviewing these major migratory patterns of Africans to and within the United States from slavery to the present and defining the primary tropes and traditions in African American female mystery writing, each subsequent chapter looks intensely at specific figurative locations that could become a repository for reconstituted dense space in the new world. Detectives as penned by African American women writers sound out and deliberate over the viability of integrated institutions, the family, Bohemianism, religion, cities, class consciousness, and finally culture. Courses on African American literature, African American history and culture, detective fiction, urban studies, and women's studies would find the book instructive.

Introduction - Bending the Falcon: Black Women Writers Revamp Mysteries - Integrationist Tales - Travel: Meditations on Postmodernism - Family Compounds - Homegrown Religion - Ubiquitous, Invisible Class - On the Block - Sensuality: A Reverberating Force - Notes - Select Bibliography.


Carol Allen received her Ph.D. in American literature from Rutgers University and her M.A. and B.A. in English from the University of Virginia. Dr. Allen has been employed at Long Island University since 1995 and has been a full professor in the English Department since 2009 and Director of the Africana Studies Program since 2005. Her previous publications include several journal articles, reviews, and two books: Peculiar Passages: Black Women Playwrights, 1875 to 2000 and Black Women Intellectuals: Strategies of Nation, Family, and Neighborhood in the Works of Pauline Hopkins, Jessie Fauset, and Marita Bonner.

Über den Autor

Carol Allen received her Ph.D. in American literature from Rutgers University and her M.A. and B.A. in English from the University of Virginia. Dr. Allen has been employed at Long Island University since 1995 and has been a full professor in the English Department since 2009 and Director of the Africana Studies Program since 2005. Her previous publications include several journal articles, reviews, and two books: Peculiar Passages: Black Women Playwrights, 1875 to 2000 and Black Women Intellectuals: Strategies of Nation, Family, and Neighborhood in the Works of Pauline Hopkins, Jessie Fauset, and Marita Bonner.


Inhaltsverzeichnis

Introduction - Bending the Falcon: Black Women Writers Revamp Mysteries - Integrationist Tales - Travel: Meditations on Postmodernism - Family Compounds - Homegrown Religion - Ubiquitous, Invisible Class - On the Block - Sensuality: A Reverberating Force - Notes - Select Bibliography.


Klappentext

Using literary criticism, theory, and sociohistoric data, this book brings into conversation black migrations with mystery novels by African American women, novels which explore fully the psychic, economic, and spiritual impact of mass migratory movements. Diaspora travel has been forced and selected and has extended from the Slave Trade through the contemporary moment, causing the black subject to wrestle with motion, the self in motion, the community in motion, the spirit in motion, culture in motion, and especially the past in motion. Reviewing these major migratory patterns of Africans to and within the United States from slavery to the present and defining the primary tropes and traditions in African American female mystery writing, each subsequent chapter looks intensely at specific figurative locations that could become a repository for reconstituted dense space in the new world. Detectives as penned by African American women writers sound out and deliberate over the viability of integrated institutions, the family, Bohemianism, religion, cities, class consciousness, and finally culture. Courses on African American literature, African American history and culture, detective fiction, urban studies, and women¿s studies would find the book instructive.



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