Fr. 115.00

Jim Crow Modernism

English · Hardback

Will be released 17.04.2026

Description

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The "problem of the twentieth century" was one of the most important factors in the development of American modernism. W. E. B. Du Bois, of course, identified that problem as "the color line" a phrase for the broad array of laws and practices that promulgated legal segregation, cultural separation, and racial antagonism in the US from the end of Reconstruction through the Civil Rights era. A more familiar name, borrowed from the popular tradition of blackface minstrelsy, personified this elusive but ever-present racial regime: Jim Crow. Taking as its starting point the contemporaneity of the Jim Crow era and the modernist era in art and culture, Jim Crow Modernism explores how these phenomena informed one another, and how artists and thinkers on both sides of the color line worked in and against the "separate but equal" landscape and the organizing logic of Jim Crow.

This collection of new essays by prominent scholars in several fields-from American literary studies to film, media, art history, politics, and performance-provides a broad and deep analysis of this vital aspect of modern cultural history. Contributors address well known modernist figures like T. S. Eliot, William Faulkner, Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, Ann Petry, and Wallace Thurman, as well as many others, from the Jamaican-American writer Claude McKay to the Japanese-American artist Isamu Noguchi to the Afro-Latino writer Piri Thomas, whose peripatetic lives and careers initiated them into far-ranging traditions and contexts. At the same time, Jim Crow Modernism reaches well beyond the segregated US South to examine national and global spaces, networks, and migrations, from New York and Los Angeles to the Caribbean, Europe, Africa, and Asia.

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About the author










Adam McKible, Professor of English at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, teaches American and African American literature. He is the author of Circulating Jim Crow: The Saturday Evening Post and the War Against Black Modernity (2024) and The Space and Place of Modernism: The Russian Revolution, Little Magazines, and New York (2002). He edited and introduced Edward Christopher Williams's When Washington Was in Vogue (2004), a previously lost novel of the Harlem Renaissance. He is also co-editor of a special issue of Modernism/modernity devoted to the Harlem Renaissance (2013) and of the collection, Little Magazines and Modernism: New Approaches (2005).

Robert Jackson, James G. Watson Professor of English at the University of Tulsa, is a cultural historian of the modern and contemporary United States. He has written Fade In, Crossroads: A History of the Southern Cinema (2017) and Seeking the Region in American Literature and Culture: Modernity, Dissidence,

Innovation (2005), and he has published scholarship in such journals as Modernism/modernity, American Literary History, the Southern Literary Journal, and the Journal of American History. His editorial work includes special issues of The James Baldwin Review, The Faulkner Journal, and The Global South.

Keith Clark is Distinguished University Professor, Professor of English, and affiliate faculty in the African and African American Studies program at George Mason University. He is the author of Black Manhood in James Baldwin, Ernest J. Gaines and August Wilson (2002), The Radical Fiction of Ann Petry (2013), and Navigating the Fiction of Ernest J. Gaines: A Roadmap for Readers (2020). His essays have in appeared in African American Review, Callaloo, Black Queer Studies: A Critical Anthology, and The Bloomsbury Handbook to Toni Morrison.


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