AFRICAN AMERICAN CRITICISM ( Lois Tyson)
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AFRICAN AMERICAN CRITICISM(Lois Tyson)
Estudios Literarios 2U.T.N.-F.R.V.M.
Natalia Destefanis, Francisco Vergara2012
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• Racial Issues and African American Literary History
• African American Criticism and Literature
• Attempts to Analyze the African American Literary Tradition
• Beloved• Activities
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Racial Issues and African American Literary History
Until late 1960s Cultural hegemony of white America.
Virtual exclusion of African American History:
*Slave uprisings during the Middle Passage *Networks of resistance developed by slaves *Harlem Renaissance
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Key Concepts in African American Criticism
• Racialism: Belief in racial superiority• Racism: Sociopolitical domination• Institutionalized Racism: Racist policies and practices
in institutions
American Literary Canon: Eurocentric definition of universalism
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Contemporary Black American Authors*Toni Morrison * Nikki Giovanni
*Alice Walker *John Edgar Wideman
*Maya Angelou *Gloria Naylor
*Ishmael Reed *Charles Johnson
*Rita Dove *Sherley Anne Williams
*August Wilson *Ernest J. Gaines
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Psychological Results of Racism
• Internalized Racism• Intra-racial Racism• Double Consciousness (or Double Vision)
“Writing for Whites”
“Writing for Blacks”
Langston HughesCountee Cullen
Literary style inseparable from writer’s role as amember of an oppressed group.
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African oral tradition of storytelling and folklore
Poetics and Politics
• 18th Cent.: Writing as proof of humanity• Black Arts Movement of the 1960s: -Black writers (and critics) have an obligation to help the race through literary means -Questioning of Deconstructionism -Opposition to the notion of “Universality”
Afrocentricity: Primacy of relationship to African culture e.g.: Trickster tales
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African American Criticism and Literature
Recurring historical and sociological themes• Reflection of the politics of black American experience.• Until the mid-twentieth century, black writers had to treat
racially charged subjects carefully or encode them in their writing
Correcting stereotypes, omissions, and misrepresentations
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Prominent Features
• Orality: *Black Vernacular English. Copying the rhythms o of black speech
*Repeating important phrases. Alternating voices
• Folk Motifs: *Range of character types and folk practices *Sense of continuity with the African and African z American past
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Character Types
• the local healer• the conjurer• the matriarch• the storyteller• the trickster• the religious leader• the folk hero
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Folk Practices
• Singing worksongs, hymns, and the blues• Engaging in folk and religious rituals as a way of
maintaining community and continuity with the past;• Storytelling as a way of relating personal and group
history and passing down traditional wisdom• Passing down folk crafts and skills• Emphasizing the importance of naming
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Attempts to Analyze the African American Literary Tradition
The Signifying Monkey by Henry Louis Gates
• He views African American literary history as a history of relationships among literary texts
• People engage in a folk practice called “Signifying” (the term refers to various indirect ways of giving opinions about another person)
• A literary application of Gates’s theory: Richard Wright and Ralph Ellison
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Richard Wright Ralph Ellison- A naturalist- Racist oppression
represented in stark language
- Aim: to describe the depth of black suffering
- A modernist - Human experience
represented by ambiguous, metaphorical language
- He signifies upon Wright by parodying Wright’s literary structures
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Attempts to Analyze the African American Literary Tradition
Blues, Ideology and African American Literature by Houston Baker
• He relates African American literary tradition to an African American folk art: the blues (a form of African American cultural self-expression)
• Literary texts and blues songs generally have a double theme: a spiritual theme and a material theme
• The material theme does not refer to escaping from or buying oneself out of slavery
• It refers to the economic oppression that becomes a form of bondage
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“when personae, protagonists, autobiographical narrators, or literary critics successfully negotiate an obdurate `economics of slavery´ and achieve a resonant, improvisational expressive dignity” (qtd. in Tyson, 392)
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African American Women
They were excluded from or marginalized by the African American Literary Canon
They have been represented in literary works as stereotyped characters
They have been concerned to portray black women as real people with the complexity that they have
According to Washington, black women must negotiate the requirements of their relationship to the black community and to women of all races to resist sexist oppression.
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Recurring Themes• Underpaid workers• Victims of violence and sexual exploitation• Their community • White standards of beauty• Passing for white
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African American Women
Black women writers have a revisionist mission to provide readers with realistic female character types
Washington describes 3 salient types:• “Suspended woman”• “Assimilated woman”• “Emergent woman”
“All these literary devices emphasize the struggle of black women to assert their own identity” (395)• Some critics add a fourth type: “Liberated woman”
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Recurring Literary Strategies
o A black female character as the speaker or narrator
o 3rd person narrator: the point-of-view character is also a black woman
o Imagery associated with locations within the home
o Imagery associated with their physical appearance
“All these literary devices emphasize the struggle of black women to assert their own identity” (395)
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African American Criticism: Insights into Literary Works by White Americans Writers
Playing in the Dark: Whiteness and the Literary Imagination by Toni Morrison
• She tries to reveal the way in which white texts construct the `Africanist´ presence in American history
• The term `Africanist´ refers to the denotative and connotative blackness that African peoples have come to signify and to the range of assumptions that accompany Eurocentric learning about these peoples
• The Africanist presence has a negative image• Whites use black characters as a vehicle for illegal sexuality, fear of
madness, expulsion and self-loathing
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Toni Morrison
1931-Lorain, Ohio
The Bluest Eye (1970)Song of Solomon (1977)Beloved (1987)
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Key Concepts in African American Criticism
Which of the following concepts of African American Criticism best describes the situation portrayed in
School Daze?
• Internalized Racism• Intra-racial Racism• Double Consciousness• Racialism• Afrocentrism• Institutionalized Racism
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The Social Role of the Black Artist (Tyson)
Which of the three following positions might be related to the opening scene of Spike Lee’s Malcolm X?
• “Cullen (…) believed that black authors should be as free as white authors to create according to the dictates of their own artistic inspiration without being obliged to consider the political needs of their people.” (363)
• “Writing as a form of purely individual expression has been viewed by many African Americans as a luxury the race could not afford while so many of its members were oppressed.” (364)
• “Such concepts as “center” and “periphery” are illusory.(…) The concept of a stable, inherently meaningful cultural identity” must be questioned. “The “self” is a fragmented collection of numerous “selves” that has no stable meaning or value except those we assign to it.”(365)
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Works Cited
Duvall, John. The Identifying Fictions of Toni Morrison: Modernist Authenticity
and Postmodern Blackness. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2000. Print.
Lee, Spike, dir. Malcolm X. Warner Bros., 1992. Film.
Lee, Spike, dir. School Daze. 40 Acres & A Mule Filmworks, 1988. Film.
Morrison, Toni. Beloved. New York: Penguin Group, 1998. Print.
Tyson, Lois. Critical Theory Today: A User’s Friendly Guide. New York:
Routledge, 2006. Print.