
Race and White Identity in Southern Fiction: From Faulkner to Morrison By John N. Duvall
2008 | 224 Pages | ISBN: 1403983879 | PDF | 1 MB
Race and White Identity in Southern Fiction explores a form of racial passing that has gone largely unnoticed. Duvall makes visible the means by which southern novelists repeatedly imagined their white characters as fundamentally black in some sense. Beginning with William Faulkner, Duvall traces a form of figurative and rhetorical masking in twentieth-century southern fiction that derives from whiteface minstrelsy. In the fiction of such subsequent writers as Flannery O'Connor, John Barth, Dorothy Allison, and Ishmael Reed, the reader sees characters who present a white face to the world, even as they unconsciously perform cultural blackness. These queer performances of race repeatedly reveal that being merely Caucasian is insufficient to claim Southern Whiteness.
Buy Premium From My Links To Get Resumable Support,Max Speed & Support Me
Links are Interchangeable - Single Extraction
