Crowd Control Crowd Control

Crowd Control

The Racial Ordering of Literary Reward

Claire Grossman and Others
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    • Expected Sep 29, 2026
    • $16.99
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Publisher Description

From the race riots of 1919 to the Black Lives Matter movement, anxieties about Black uprising have influenced literary funding and prestige in the United States. Across many decades, grants and prizes have shaped the broader ecosystem of US literature, working in tandem to reroute Black militancy and define literary excellence as white. Even as the field diversified in the twenty-first century, prestige institutions raised barriers to entry and imposed new constraints on writers of color.

Crowd Control tells the story of how efforts to contain Black resistance led to the invention of American literary excellence. It brings together archival research and comprehensive data on literary prize demographics with readings of works by Claude McKay, Langston Hughes, William Styron, Claudia Rankine, and others to offer a material account of how US literature has imagined—and managed—protest. Because literature was thought to mollify, redirect, or cast public doubt on militant resistance, moments of mass protest consistently have been followed by targeted support for Black writers. Tracing the evolution of the institutions that reward writers across more than a century, this book unveils the hidden connection between literary funding and social control.

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
AVAILABLE
2026
September 29
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
264
Pages
PUBLISHER
Columbia University Press
SELLER
Lightning Source, LLC