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Informationen zum Autor Ernest is Eberly Family Distinguished Professor of American Literature. He is the author of Resistance and Reformation in Nineteenth-Century African-American Literature and Liberation Historiography: African American Writers and the Challenge of History, 1794-1861. Klappentext Given the rise of new interdisciplinary and methodological approaches to African American and Black Atlantic studies, The Oxford Handbook of the African American Slave Narrative offers a fresh, wide-ranging assessment of this major American literary genre. Zusammenfassung Given the rise of new interdisciplinary and methodological approaches to African American and Black Atlantic studies, The Oxford Handbook of the African American Slave Narrative offers a fresh, wide-ranging assessment of this major American literary genre. Inhaltsverzeichnis The Oxford Handbook of the African American Slave Narrative; Contents; John Ernest! Introduction; Historical Fractures; 1. Mitch Kachun. Slave Narratives and Historical Memory; 2. Eric Gardner. Slave Narratives and Archival Research; 3. Dickson Bruce. Slave Narratives and Historical Understanding; 4. Jeannine DeLombard. Slave Narratives and U.S. Legal History; Layered Testimonies; 5. Marie Jenkins Schwartz. The WPA Narratives as Historical Sources; 6. Sharon Ann Musher. The Other Slave Narratives: the Works Progress Administration Interviews; 7. Elizabeth Regosin. Lost in the Archives: The Pension Bureau Files; 8. John Michael Vlach. The Witness of African American Folkways: The Landscape of Slave Narratives; Textual Bindings; 9. Teresa Goddu. Slave Narratives as Texts; 10. Dwight McBride and Justin A. Joyce. Reading Communities: Slave Narratives and the Discursive Reader; 11. Kenneth Warren. Slave Narratives and American Literary Studies; 12. Marcus Wood. Slave Narratives and Visual Culture; 13. William Andrews. Post-Emancipation Slave Narratives; Experience and Authority; 14. Aliyyah Abdur-Rahman. This Horrible Exhibition: Sexuality in Slave Narratives; 15. DoVeanna Fulton. There is Might in Each: Slave Narratives and Black Feminism; 16. Maurice O. Wallace. I Rose a Freeman: Power! Property and the Performance of Manhood in Slave Narratives; 17. Brenda Stevenson. Beyond the Protagonist: Families and Communities in Slave Narratives; 18. Barbara McCaskill. Collaborative Slave Narratives; Environments and Migrations; 19. Kimberly Smith. The Ecology of Slave Narratives; 20. Rhondda R. Thomas. Locating Slave Narratives; 21. Winfried Siemerling. Slave Narratives and Hemispheric Studies; 22. Nicole N. Aljoe. Caribbean Slave Narratives; 23. Helen Thomas. Slave Narratives and Transatlantic Literature; Echoes and Traces; 24. Daphne Brooks. Slave Narratives and the Performance of Race and Freedom; 25. Joycelyn Moody. The Truth of Slave Narratives: Slavery's Traces in Postmemory ...