Writing the urban dwelling : street, text, and representation in African American literature / Mattius Rischard.
Material type:
TextSeries: Routledge studies in African American literaturePublication details: New York, NY : Routledge, 2024.Description: 1 online resourceISBN: - 1003378358
- 9781040006207
- 1040006205
- 9781040006184
- 1040006183
- 9781003378358
- American fiction -- African American authors -- History and criticism
- American fiction -- 20th century -- History and criticism
- Street literature -- United States -- History and criticism
- African Americans in literature
- Cities and towns in literature
- LITERARY CRITICISM / General
- LITERARY CRITICISM / American / African-American
- 813/.509896073 23/eng/20231221
| Item type | Current library | Call number | Materials specified | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
E-Books
|
National Library of India Online Resource | 813/.509896073 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | EBK000054938 |
"Comprehensive and comparative, this volume investigates African American street novelists from the Chicago Black Renaissance and the semiotic strategies they employ in publication, consumption, and depiction of street life. Divided into three sections, this text analyzes the content, style, and ethics of "street" narrative through a discursive/rhetorical lens, exploring the development of street literature's formal and contextual concerns to answer the sociocultural and political questions surrounding cultural work. The book also gives emphasis to "text" or literary/(post)structural analysis, answering the questions about the genre's aesthetic and linguistic tactics necessitated as a response to the strategies of urban planning. The last section, "representation," investigates the phenomenological hermeneutics of street literature, highlighting the political stakes for authorship, credibility, and subjectivity. Through historical and contemporary studies of urban space, Blackness, and adaptations of street literature, this work provides an performative engagement between networks of support in the greater reading public and the ontology of the inner city"-- Provided by publisher.
There are no comments on this title.
