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At home in diaspora : black international writing
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ISBN: 0816644926 0816644918 0816696802 Year: 2005 Publisher: Minneapolis London : University of Minnesota Press,

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Looking at 20th-century African American, Caribbean, and Black European literature, Walters focuses on the link between displacement and narrative. Displacement, she suggests, creates a distant that allows writers to encode critiques of their homelands, to construct new homelands, and to envision new communities.

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Archives of the Black Atlantic: reading between literature and history
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ISBN: 0203562844 0415821517 1136753524 1136753591 1138377708 Year: 2013 Publisher: Routledge

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Multiply/Divide : On the American Real and Surreal
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ISBN: 1941411088 Year: 2015 Publisher: New York : Sarabande Books,

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Literary essays explore psyches of American cities, race, and the shrinking space between safety and danger.

Book
Fictions of emancipation : Carpeaux's 'why born enslaved' reconsidered
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ISBN: 9781588397447 1588397440 Year: 2022 Publisher: New York, N.Y. The Metropolitan Museum of Art

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"This groundbreaking publication on Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux's (1827-1875) bust Why Born Enslaved! examines the work in the context of transatlantic abolitionist movements and France's colonialist fascination with Africa in the nineteenth century. Thoughtful essays by noted art historians and literary scholars, including Adrienne L. Childs, James Smalls, and Wendy S. Walters, unpack European artists' engagement with the Black figure, simultaneously evoked as a changeable political symbol and a representation of exoticized beauty and desire. The authors compare Carpeaux's sculpture to works by his contemporaries, such as Charles-Henri-Joseph Cordier, Edmonia Lewis, and Louis Simon Boizot, as well as to objects by twenty-first-century artists Kara Walker and Kehinde Wiley. In so doing, the book critically examines the portrayal of Black emancipation and personhood; the commodification of Black images to assert social capital; the role of sculpture in generating the sympathies of its audiences; and the relevance of Carpeaux's sculpture to legacies of empire in the postcolonial present. It will also feature a chronology of events central to the nineteenth-century antislavery movement."--Publisher's description. "Organized around a single object--the marble bust Why Born Enslaved! by French sculptor Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux--Fictions of Emancipation: Carpeaux Recast is the first exhibition at The Met to examine Western sculpture in relation to the histories of transatlantic slavery, colonialism, and empire. Created in the wake of American emancipation and some twenty years after the abolition of slavery in the French Atlantic, Why Born Enslaved! was shaped by the enduring popularity of antislavery imagery, the development of nineteenth-century ethnographic theories of racial difference, and France's colonialist fascination with Africa. The exhibition will explore the sculpture's place within these contexts. Featuring more than thirty-five works of art in sections unfolding around Carpeaux's sculpture, Fictions of Emancipation will offer an in-depth look at portrayals of Black enslavement, emancipation, and personhood with an aim toward challenging the notion that representation in the wake of abolition constitutes a clear moral or political stance. Important works by Josiah Wedgwood, Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi, Charles Cordier, Edmonia Lewis, Louis-Simon Boizot, and others will show how Western artists of the nineteenth century engaged with the Black figure as a political symbol and site of exoticized beauty, while contemporary sculptures by Kara Walker and Kehinde Wiley will connect the dialogue around Carpeaux's bust to current conversations about the legacies of slavery in the Western world. This exhibition was conceived in collaboration with guest curator Wendy S. Walters and enriched through conversations with numerous intellectual partners. It is one of many projects that the Museum is undertaking in an effort to reassess and broaden the narratives it presents about the past and present."--Metropolitan Museum of Art website.


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New Thoughts on the Black Arts Movement

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Multi
Oil Fictions : World Literature and Our Contemporary Petrosphere
Authors: --- --- --- --- --- et al.
ISBN: 9780271091877 Year: 2021 Publisher: University Park, Pa Penn State University Press

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Literature


Digital
Diasporic Africa : A Reader
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ISBN: 9780814733226 Year: 2006 Publisher: New York, N.Y. New York University Press

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History


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New Thoughts on the Black Arts Movement
Authors: --- --- --- --- --- et al.
ISBN: 0813536944 0813536952 0813541077 1280947039 9786610947034 Year: 2006 Publisher: Rutgers University Press

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New Thoughts on the Black Arts Movement
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ISBN: 9780813541075 9780813536941 Year: 2006 Publisher: New Brunswick, N.J. Rutgers University Press

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