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E-grāmata: Fugitive Testimony: On the Visual Logic of Slave Narratives

  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Nov-2016
  • Izdevniecība: Fordham University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780823272914
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  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Nov-2016
  • Izdevniecība: Fordham University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780823272914

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Fugitive Testimony traces the long arc of the African American slave narrative across the 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries in order to rethink the epistemological limits of the form and to theorize the complicated interplay between the visual and the literary throughout its history. Gathering an archive of ante- and post-bellum literary slave narratives and visual art, the book redraws the genealogy of the slave narrative in light of its emergence in contemporary art and brings visual and performance theory to bear on the genre's central problematic: that the ex-slave narrator must be both object and subject of the narrative to provide an eyewitness account of his or her own enslavement. The book takes as its starting point the evocation of the slave narrative in works by a number of current-day visual artists, including Glenn Ligon, Kara Walker, and Ellen Driscoll, and uses the representational strategies of these artists to decode the visual work performed in 19th-century literary narratives by Elizabeth Keckley, Solomon Northup, William Craft, and Henry Box Brown, among others. The manuscript's primary insight is the discovery that fugitive narrators and artists undermine the racialist logic subtending the slave narrative form--the presumption that black experience must be legitimated by white authority--by juxtaposing visual and literary racial codes within the narrative. Focusing on slave narratives' textual visuality, rather than the intermedial, semiotic traffic between images and text, the book argues that ex-slave narrators and the contemporary artists under consideration use the logic of the slave narrative form against itself to undermine the evidentiary epistemology of the genre and offer a model of visuality as intersubjective recognition rather than objective division.

Recenzijas

"In this original book Janet Neary views nineteenth-century slave narratives through the lens of contemporary art. This innovative strategy enables her to bring into focus the visual work of slave narratives and their resistance to the conventions of authentication. This is an important book that demonstrates how literature participates in the concerns of visual culture and how nineteenth-century problems of race and representation persist in the present." -- -Shawn Michelle Smith School of the Art Institute of Chicago

Introduction: Representational Static 1(28)
1 Sight Unseen: Contemporary Visual Slave Narratives
29(25)
2 Behind the Scenes and Inside Out: Elizabeth Keckly's Use of the Slave Narrative Form
54(25)
3 Optical Allusions: Textual Visuality in Running a Thousand Miles for Freedom
79(24)
4 "The Shadow of the Cloud": Racial Speculation and Cultural Vision in Solomon Northup's Twelve Years a Slave
103(25)
5 Gestures Against Movements: Henry Box Brown and Economies of Narrative Performance
128(25)
Epilogue. Racial Violence, Racial Capitalism, and Reading Revolution 153(22)
Harriet Jacobs
John Jones
Kerry James Marshall
Kyle Baker
Acknowledgments 175(4)
Notes 179(38)
Index 217
Janet Neary is Associate Professor of Nineteenth-century African American Literature and Culture in the English Department, Hunter College, City University of New York.