John Ernest
The Oxford Handbook of the African American Slave Narrative
John Ernest
The Oxford Handbook of the African American Slave Narrative
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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 will offer a fresh, wide-ranging assessment of this major American literary genre.
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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 will offer a fresh, wide-ranging assessment of this major American literary genre.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 490
- Erscheinungstermin: 2. März 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 170mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 771g
- ISBN-13: 9780190677428
- ISBN-10: 0190677422
- Artikelnr.: 57878213
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 490
- Erscheinungstermin: 2. März 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 170mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 771g
- ISBN-13: 9780190677428
- ISBN-10: 0190677422
- Artikelnr.: 57878213
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
John 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.
* 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
* 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
* 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
* 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