Fr. 286.00

Racial Blasphemies - Religious Irreverence and Race in American Literature

English · Hardback

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Informationen zum Autor Michael L. Cobb is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Toronto. His essays on race, sexuality, and literature have appeared in Callaloo , GLQ , and the University of Toronto Quarterly . Klappentext Racial Blasphemies! using critical race theory and literary analysis! charts the tense! frustrated religious language that saturates much twentieth-century American literature. Michael Cobb argues that we should consider religious language as a special kind of language - a language of curse words - that furiously communicates not theology or spirituality as much as it signals the sheer difficulty of representing race in a non-racist manner on the literary page. Zusammenfassung Using critical race theory and literary analysis, this book charts the tense, frustrated religious language that saturates much twentieth-century American literature. Inhaltsverzeichnis IntroductionChapter One: Painfully Obvious: Nakedness and Religious Words in Go Tell It on the MountainArresting Whiteness: Religious History and Local Color in Wise BloodChapter Three:She Was Something Holy in a Vulgar Place: The Resanguination of the Word in Brown Girl, BrownstonesChapter Four:Actual Sacrilege: The Blasphemous Narration of Race in Light in August

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