Invisible Criticism Invisible Criticism

Invisible Criticism

Ralph Ellison and the American Canon

    • 16,99 €
    • 16,99 €

Description de l’éditeur

In 1952 Ralph Ellison won the National Book Award for his Kafkaesque and claustrophobic novel about the life of a nameless young black man in New York City. Although Invisible Man has remained the only novel that Ellison published in his lifetime, it is generally regarded as one of the most important works of fiction in our century.

This new reading of a classic work examines Ellison’s relation to and critique of the American literary canon by demonstrating that the pattern of allusions in Invisible Man forms a literary-critical subtext which challenges the accepted readings of such major American authors as Emerson, Melville, and Twain.

Modeling his argument on Foucault’s analysis of the asylum, Nadel analyzes the institution of the South to show how it moved blacks from “enslavement” to “slavery” to “invisibility”—all in the interest of maintaining an organization of power based on racial caste. He then demonstrates the ways Ellison wrote in the modernist/surreal tradition to trace symbolically the history of blacks in America as they moved not only from the nineteenth century to the twentieth, and from the rural South to the urban North, but as they moved (sometimes unnoticed) through American fiction.

It is on this latter movement that Nadel focuses his criticism, first demonstrating theoretically that allusions can impel reconsideration of the alluded-to text and thus function as a form of literary criticism, and then reading the specific criticism implied by Ellison’s allusions to Emerson’s essays and Lewis Mumford’s The Golden Days, as well as to “Benito Cereno” and The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. Nadel also considers Ellison’s allusions to Whitman, Eliot, Joyce, and the New Testament.

Invisible Criticism will be of interest not only to students of American and Afro-American literature but also to those concerned about issues of literary theory, particularly in the areas of intertextual relationships, canonicity, and rehistoricism.

GENRE
Romans et littérature
SORTIE
1991
1 mars
LANGUE
EN
Anglais
LONGUEUR
197
Pages
ÉDITIONS
University of Iowa Press
TAILLE
933,7
Ko

Plus de livres similaires

Reading Percival Everett Reading Percival Everett
2017
Machine and Metaphor Machine and Metaphor
2006
Philip Roth's Rude Truth Philip Roth's Rude Truth
2008
On Faulkner On Faulkner
2012
Individual and Community Individual and Community
2012
Figures of Division Figures of Division
2017

Plus de livres par Alan Nadel

Dramatic Apparitions and Theatrical Ghosts Dramatic Apparitions and Theatrical Ghosts
2023
The Theatre of August Wilson The Theatre of August Wilson
2018
Demographic Angst Demographic Angst
2017
August Wilson August Wilson
2010
May All Your Fences Have Gates May All Your Fences Have Gates
1993
Containment Culture Containment Culture
1995