Mandy Oxendine
Title | Mandy Oxendine PDF eBook |
Author | Charles Waddell Chesnutt |
Publisher | University of Illinois Press |
Pages | 148 |
Release | 1997 |
Genre | Fiction |
ISBN | 9780252063473 |
In a novel rejected by a major publisher in the 19th century as too shocking for its time, writer Charles W. Chesnutt (1858-1932) challenges the notion that race, class, education, and gender must define one's rightful place in society. Both a romance and a mystery, MANDY OXENDINE tells the compelling story of two fair-skinned, racially mixed lovers who chose to live on opposite sides of the color line.
Whiteness in the Novels of Charles W. Chesnutt
Title | Whiteness in the Novels of Charles W. Chesnutt PDF eBook |
Author | Matthew Wilson |
Publisher | Univ. Press of Mississippi |
Pages | 286 |
Release | 2009 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 9781604732481 |
An examination of race and audience in an American innovator's writings
Charles W. Chesnutt and the Fictions of Race
Title | Charles W. Chesnutt and the Fictions of Race PDF eBook |
Author | Dean McWilliams |
Publisher | University of Georgia Press |
Pages | 276 |
Release | 2010-07-01 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 0820327247 |
Charles Chesnutt (1858-1932) was the first African American writer of fiction to win the attention and approval of America's literary establishment. Looking anew at Chesnutt's public and private writings, his fiction and nonfiction, and his well-known and recently rediscovered works, Dean McWilliams explores Chesnutt's distinctive contribution to American culture: how his stories and novels challenge our dominant cultural narratives--particularly their underlying assumptions about race. The published canon of Chesnutt's work has doubled in the last decade: three novels completed but unpublished in Chesnutt's life have appeared, as have scholarly editions of Chesnutt's journals, his letters, and his essays. This book is the first to offer chapter-length analyses of each of Chesnutt's six novels. It also devotes three chapters to his short fiction. Previous critics have read Chesnutt's nonfiction as biographical background for his fiction. McWilliams is the first to analyze these nonfiction texts as complex verbal artifacts embodying many of the same tensions and ambiguities found in Chesnutt's stories and novels. The book includes separate chapters on Chesnutt's journal and on his important essay "The Future American." Moreover, Charles W. Chesnutt and the Fictions of Race approaches Chesnutt's writings from the perspective of recent literary theory. To a greater extent than any previous study of Chesnutt, it explores the way his texts interrogate and deconstruct the language and the intellectual constructs we use to organize reality. The full effect of this new study is to show us how much more of a twentieth-century writer Chesnutt is than has been previously acknowledged. This accomplishment can only hasten his reemergence as one of our most important observers of race in American culture.
Chesnutt and Realism
Title | Chesnutt and Realism PDF eBook |
Author | Ryan Simmons |
Publisher | University of Alabama Press |
Pages | 210 |
Release | 2006-08-08 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 0817315209 |
Provides an important examination of Charles Chesnutt as a practitioner of realism Although Chesnutt is typically acknowledged as the most prominent African American writer of the realist period, scholars have paid little attention to the central question of this study: what does it mean to call Chesnutt a realist? As a writer whose career was restricted by the dismal racial politics of his era, Chesnutt refused to conform to literary conventions for depicting race. Nor did he use his imaginative skills to evade the realities he and other African Americans faced. Rather, he experimented with ways of portraying reality that could elicit an appropriate, proportionate response to it, as Ryan Simmons demonstrates in extended readings of each of Chesnutt’s novels, including important unpublished works overlooked by previous critics. In addition, Chesnutt and Realism addresses a curiously neglected subject in American literary studies—the relationship between American literary realism and race. By taking Chesnutt seriously as a contributor to realism, this book articulates the strategies by which one African American intellectual helped to define the discourses that influenced his fate.
That Middle World
Title | That Middle World PDF eBook |
Author | Julia S. Charles |
Publisher | UNC Press Books |
Pages | 243 |
Release | 2020-10-01 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 1469659581 |
In this study of racial passing literature, Julia S. Charles highlights how mixed-race subjects invent cultural spaces for themselves—a place she terms that middle world—and how they, through various performance strategies, make meaning in the interstices between the Black and white worlds. Focusing on the construction and performance of racial identity in works by writers from the antebellum period through Reconstruction, Charles creates a new discourse around racial passing to analyze mixed-race characters' social objectives when crossing into other racialized spaces. To illustrate how this middle world and its attendant performativity still resonates in the present day, Charles connects contemporary figures, television, and film—including Rachel Dolezal and her Black-passing controversy, the FX show Atlanta, and the musical Show Boat—to a range of nineteenth- and early twentieth-century literary texts. Charles's work offers a nuanced approach to African American passing literature and examines how mixed-race performers articulated their sense of selfhood and communal belonging.
Lives Out of Letters
Title | Lives Out of Letters PDF eBook |
Author | Robert N. Hudspeth |
Publisher | Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press |
Pages | 292 |
Release | 2004 |
Genre | Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | 9780838640050 |
Though the efficacy of literary biography has been widely contested by academic theorists, artention to the lives of authors remains an enduring fact of our literary history. Dedicated to Robert N. Hudspeth, editor of the Letters of Margaret Fuller and the Correspondence of Henry David Thoreau, the eleven essays in this collection address from a practitioner's perspective the relationship between American literary biography, documentation, and interpretation.
Mandy Oxendine [by] Charles W. Chesnutt
Title | Mandy Oxendine [by] Charles W. Chesnutt PDF eBook |
Author | Charles Waddell Chesnutt |
Publisher | |
Pages | 356 |
Release | 198? |
Genre | American literature |
ISBN |