Black Refusal, Black Magic: Reading African American Literature Now

被引:2
|
作者
Jenkins, Candice M. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Illinois, English & African Amer Studies, Champaign, IL 61820 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1093/alh/ajx033
中图分类号
I3/7 [各国文学];
学科分类号
摘要
This essay comments on the collected essays in the ALH special issue on twenty-first-century African American literature. Taken together, these contributors' essays make clear that there is no single idea, issue, or story that defines our current literary era-only a shared accumulation of upheavals, dissonances, and resonances that come together under the rubric (itself contested) of the contemporary. Guided by the suggestive content of the essays in the collection, I offer in this response my sense of the present black literary landscape. My thoughts coalesce around four central ideas that these essays raise either explicitly or implicitly: audience, form, region, and labor. I consider how contemporary African American literature is received, and how and why it should be understood as a 'devastated form'; I address, as well, why the omission of the South in these essays is so troubling, and how we might think about the roles that capitalism, class, and commodity culture play in black literary production. My essay concludes, ultimately, that black refusal and what might be called black magic are crucial heuristics for understanding both what is, and what is possible, in the field. © The Author 2017. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.
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页码:779 / 789
页数:11
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