Book Description
During the Harlem Renaissance, competing rhetorics of racial uplift centered upon concerns regarding class identification and the process of acculturation into American society. This book demonstrates how the practice of motherhood and the organization of household relations operated to address the pressing issues facing the black community of the early twentieth century. An exploration of such literary constructs as the tragic mulatto, the passing phenomenon, and the mammy result in a revitalized understanding of how the influences of racial intolerance, sexual oppression, and class ideology combined to provoke a model of resistant black maternity in the early modern era.
Black Family Function in Novels by Jessie Fauset, Nella Larsen, and Fannie Hurst FROM THE PUBLISHER
During the Harlem Renaissance, competing rhetorics of racial uplift centered upon concerns regarding class identification and the process of acculturation into American society. This book demonstrates how the practice of motherhood and the organization of household relations operated to address the pressing issues facing the black community of the early twentieth century. An exploration of such literary constructs as the tragic mulatto, the passing phenomenon, and the mammy result in a revitalized understanding of how the influences of racial intolerance, sexual oppression, and class ideology combined to provoke a model of resistant black maternity in the early modern era.
SYNOPSIS
Calloway (English, The Citadel) explores various aspects of the class formation and acculturation within the black community through the fictional representation of maternity and domestic spaces. Fauset and Larson, she finds, deal with the tension between aspirations and social restrictions among upwardly aspiring blacks, while Hurst portrays a woman who submits without protest to racial oppression. The study is developed from her doctoral dissertation for the University of Michigan. Annotation ©2003 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR