Description
The tradition of literary criticism about black women writers has, until now, focused primarily on establishing the existence of these writers and defining the contexts within which they may be appreciated. Willis goes further by looking at the literary ramifications of particular themes that run throughout the works of major writers in this tradition-her most pivotal one being the movement from the past to the future, from girlhood to womanhood. Her approach is different from those of previous works in that she focuses strongly on these writers' literary modes-narrative, metaphor, etc.-and demonstrates how these modes are themselves essential aspects of their ideas as well as their process.
Willis establishes that the novelists she treats are not only historians who document the problems of capitalist industrial society but also visionaries who imagine for their characters alternative modes of work, community, and economy, toward which readers may look as they approach the future.
About the Author
Susan Willis is associate professor of English and the Literature Program at Duke University. She is the author of A Primer for Daily Life, and her articles have been published in a number of edited books, journals, and literary reviews.
Reviews
"Any reader even vaguely interested in contemporary Afro-American women's literature will find Willis' study immensely informative. Specifying is the most illuminating and theoretically challenging book-length explication to date of the works of one of the most talented groups of writers ever to have graced the American literary landscape." -Michael Awkward, Michigan Quarterly
Book Information
ISBN 9780299108946
Author Susan Willis
Format Paperback
Page Count 196
Imprint University of Wisconsin Press
Publisher University of Wisconsin Press
Weight(grams) 238g
Dimensions(mm) 218mm * 142mm * 12mm