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How often does a novel earn its author both the Presidential Medal of Freedom, awarded to Harper Lee by George W. Bush in 2007, and a spot on a list of "100 best gay and lesbian novels"? Clearly, To Kill a Mockingbird, Lee's Pulitzer Prize-winning tale of race relations and coming of age in Depression-era Alabama, means many different things to many different people. In Mockingbird Passing, Holly Blackford invites the reader to view Lee's beloved novel in parallel with works by other iconic American writers-from Emerson, Whitman, Stowe, and Twain to James, Wharton
Passing (Identity) in literature. --- Lee, Harper. --- Lee, Harper --- Passing (Identity) in literature
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This book is a collection of articles written by international scholars and dealing with passing from a textual and cultural perspective. All these explorations of a complex identity phenomenon that defies reductive dualities result in scholarly interrogations of societal arrangements. The texts under perusal belong to different historical periods and various communities. The novelty of this collection is that passing is viewed not only as a racial or gendered transformation, but also as a religious one. The book deals with passing either as a strategy that results in assimilation, melting, and merging, or as resistance and challenge against the whiteness-only-based identity politics.
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"This volume seeks to theorize and explore the concept of "neo-passing," or the proliferation of passing in the post-Jim Crow moment. Why--in our "color-blind" or "post-racial" moment--is passing still of such literary and cultural interest? To answer this question, chapters in this book focus on a range of passing practices, performances and texts that are part of the emerging genre of what we call neo-passing narratives. Neo-passing narratives are contemporary narratives that depict someone being taken for an identity other than what s/he is considered really to be. That these texts are written, constructed, or produced at a time when passing should have passed reveals that the questions passing raises--questions about how identity is performed and contested in relation to social norms--are just as relevant now as they were at the turn of the twentieth century"--
Race in literature. --- African Americans in literature. --- Race awareness --- African Americans --- Passing (Identity) in literature. --- Negritude --- Afro-Americans in literature --- Negroes in literature --- Race identity. --- Ethnic identity
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Anxieties of detection and undetection, she concludes, are not mutually exclusive but mutually dependent on each other's construction and formation in American history and culture.
Asian Americans --- African Americans --- Detective and mystery stories, American --- Race awareness --- Passing (Identity) in literature. --- Negritude --- Race identity. --- History and criticism. --- Ethnic identity
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The current academic milieu displays a deep ambivalence about the teaching of Western culture and traditional subject matter. This ambivalence, the product of a unique historical convergence of theory and diversity, opens up new opportunities for what Pamela Caughie calls "passing" recognizing and accounting for the subject positions involved in representing both the material being taught and oneself as a teacher.Caughie's discussion of passing illuminates a recent phenomenon in academic writing and popular culture that revolves around identities and the ways in which they are deployed, both in the arts and in lived experience. Through a wide variety of texts--novels, memoirs, film, drama, theory, museum exhibits, legal cases--she demonstrates the dynamics of passing, presenting it not as the assumption of a fraudulent identity but as the recognition that the assumption of any identity, including for the purposes of teaching, is a form of passing.Astutely addressing the relevance of passing for pedagogy, Caughie presents the possibility of a dynamic ethics responsive to the often polarizing difficulties inherent in today's culture. Challenging and thought-provoking, Passing and Pedagogy offers insight and inspiration for teachers and scholars as they seek to be responsible and effective in a complex, rapidly changing intellectual and cultural environment.
Literature --- American literature --- English literature --- Arts --- Passing (Identity) in literature. --- Passing (Identity) --- Study and teaching (Higher) --- History and criticism --- Theory, etc.
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Fakery, authenticity, and identity in American literature and culture at the turn of the 20th century Focusing on texts written between 1880 and 1930, Mary McAleer Balkun explores the concept of the "counterfeit," both in terms of material goods and invented identities, and the ways that the acquisition of objects came to define individuals in American culture and literature. Counterfeiting is, in one sense, about the creation of something that appears authentic-an invented self, a museum display, a forged work of art. But the counterfeit can also be a means by which the authentic
American literature --- 20th century --- History and criticism --- 19th century --- Authenticity (Philosophy) in literature --- Identity (Psychology) in literature --- Self in literature --- Passing (Identity) in literature --- Counterfeits and counterfeiting --- Literature --- Twain, Mark --- Larsen, Nella --- Fitzgerald, Francis Scott --- Counterfeits and counterfeiting in literature. --- Authenticity (Philosophy) in literature. --- Impostors and imposture in literature. --- Identity (Psychology) in literature. --- Passing (Identity) in literature. --- Self in literature. --- History and criticism.
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The past two decades have seen a growing influx of biracial discourse in fiction, memoir, and theory, and since the 2008 election of Barack Obama to the presidency, debates over whether America has entered a "post-racial" phase have set the media abuzz. In this penetrating and provocative study, Sika A. Dagbovie-Mullins adds a new dimension to this dialogue as she investigates the ways in which various mixed-race writers and public figures have redefined both "blackness" and "whiteness" by invoking multiple racial identities. Focusing on several key novels-Nella Larsen's Quicksand
Passing (Identity) in literature. --- Racially mixed people --- Racially mixed people in literature. --- African Americans --- American fiction --- Mulattoes in literature --- Negritude --- American literature --- Race identity --- Race identity. --- History and criticism. --- Ethnic identity --- Multiracial people in literature. --- Multiracial people
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