Remapping Citizenship and the Nation in African-American Literature
Remapping Citizenship and the Nation in African-American Literature
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Author(s): Knadler, Stephen
ISBN No.: 9780203868607
Pages: 248
Year: 200909
Format: E-Book
E-Book Format Price
DRM PDF $ 117.02

Through a reading of periodicals, memoirs, speeches, and fiction from the antebellum period to the Harlem Renaissance, this study re-examines various myths about a U.S. progressive history and about an African American counter history in terms of race, democracy, and citizenship. Reframing 19th century and early 20th-century African-American cultural history from the borderlands of the U.S. empire where many African Americans lived, worked and sought refuge, Knadler argues that these writers developed a complicated and layered transnational and creolized political consciousness that challenged dominant ideas of the nation and citizenship. Writing from multicultural contact zones, these writers forged a "e;new black politics"e;-one that anticipated the current debate about national identity and citizenship in a twenty-first century global society. As Knadler argues, they defined, created, and deployed an alternative political language to re-imagine U.


S. citizenship and its related ideas of national belonging, patriotism, natural rights, and democratic agency.


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