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Visualizing Blackness and the Creation of the African American Literary Tradition

This study examines how African American writers use visual tropes as literary devices to challenge readers' conceptions of black identity.

Lena Hill (Author)

9781107041585, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 17 February 2014

287 pages, 23 b/w illus.
23.5 x 15.8 x 2.1 cm, 0.54 kg

Negative stereotypes of African Americans have long been disseminated through the visual arts. This original and incisive study examines how black writers use visual tropes as literary devices to challenge readers' conceptions of black identity. Lena Hill charts two hundred years of African American literary history, from Phillis Wheatley to Ralph Ellison, and engages with a variety of canonical and lesser-known writers. Chapters interweave literary history, museum culture, and visual analysis of numerous illustrations with close readings of Booker T. Washington, Gwendolyn Bennett, Zora Neale Hurston, Melvin Tolson, and others. Together, these sections register the degree to which African American writers rely on vision - its modes, consequences, and insights - to demonstrate black intellectual and cultural sophistication. Hill's provocative study will interest scholars and students of African American literature and American literature more broadly.

Introduction: the trope of the picture book
Part I. Sights of Instruction: 1. Witnessing moral authority in pre-abolition literature
2. Picturing education and labor in Washington and Du Bois
3. Gazing upon plastic art in the Harlem Renaissance
Part II. Lessons from the Museum: 4. Zora Neale Hurston: seeing by the rules of the Natural History Museum
5. Melvin Tolson: gaining modernist perspective in the art gallery
6. Ralph Ellison: engaging racial perception beyond museum walls
Coda: redefining the look of American character.

Subject Areas: Black & Asian studies [JFSL3], Literary studies: from c 1900 - [DSBH], Literary studies: c 1800 to c 1900 [DSBF], Literary studies: general [DSB]

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