In the wake of a disturbing decades-long trend in both print and visual media—the appropriation of Black history and culture—another trend is observed in works of African American fiction: the reclamation of the appropriated imagery, in both neo-slave narratives and works of Afrofuturism. The image focused on specifically in this paper is that of the ship, which I argue serves at least two identifiable functions in Black fiction: first, to address the historical treatment of Africans and their American descendants, and secondly, to demonstrate Black progress and potential. Through an exploration of three works of African American fiction, works that take their Black protagonists beyond the ship's dreadful hold, the reader can see the import...
My dissertation argues for a revisionist periodization of neo-slave literature as well as a reorient...
The New Negro movement of the 1920's suggests, by its very name, the construction and reconstruction...
For over 200 years, Black women authors in the United States have cautioned that erasing the perspec...
This project began with the intention to examine the connection between the aesthetic and the politi...
The stories of enslaved black people in the United States have been creatively imagined in an abunda...
African American slave narratives are oftentimes relegated to the particularized field of ante-bellu...
In his 2005 book Conjure in African American Society, Jeffrey Anderson notes that America’s historic...
The colonial writers\u27 literary treatment of the black presence has been studied more by historian...
The colonial writers\u27 literary treatment of the black presence has been studied more by historian...
My current book project, Black Anaesthetics: African American Narrative Beyond Man, argues that writ...
This thesis argues for a unique relationship between African American literature and liminal space, ...
Slaveryrsquos legacy haunts present-day America, and its enduring trauma is reflected in the writing...
218 pagesThis dissertation considers the ethical and political stakes of delving into the past. Lite...
The Excessive Present of Abolition reframes timescales of black radical imaginaries, arguing that Bl...
Though many scholars have explored the memory of slavery in Southern literature, my project expands ...
My dissertation argues for a revisionist periodization of neo-slave literature as well as a reorient...
The New Negro movement of the 1920's suggests, by its very name, the construction and reconstruction...
For over 200 years, Black women authors in the United States have cautioned that erasing the perspec...
This project began with the intention to examine the connection between the aesthetic and the politi...
The stories of enslaved black people in the United States have been creatively imagined in an abunda...
African American slave narratives are oftentimes relegated to the particularized field of ante-bellu...
In his 2005 book Conjure in African American Society, Jeffrey Anderson notes that America’s historic...
The colonial writers\u27 literary treatment of the black presence has been studied more by historian...
The colonial writers\u27 literary treatment of the black presence has been studied more by historian...
My current book project, Black Anaesthetics: African American Narrative Beyond Man, argues that writ...
This thesis argues for a unique relationship between African American literature and liminal space, ...
Slaveryrsquos legacy haunts present-day America, and its enduring trauma is reflected in the writing...
218 pagesThis dissertation considers the ethical and political stakes of delving into the past. Lite...
The Excessive Present of Abolition reframes timescales of black radical imaginaries, arguing that Bl...
Though many scholars have explored the memory of slavery in Southern literature, my project expands ...
My dissertation argues for a revisionist periodization of neo-slave literature as well as a reorient...
The New Negro movement of the 1920's suggests, by its very name, the construction and reconstruction...
For over 200 years, Black women authors in the United States have cautioned that erasing the perspec...