Description
Essay topics include the circulation of a weekly newspaper published by black tenant farmers in the 1920s, a nineteenth-century trial of an enslaved woman, and the fetish-making of Haitian revolutionary Francois Makandal. Reconsidering the time and space of the plantation, contributors analyze Western processes of racialization and uncover the experience and agency of the oppressed. This search for modes of being within the plantation structure offers one way to rewrite histories of slavery.
Contributors. Monique Allewaert, Gwen Bergner, Benjamin Child, Jeannine Marie DeLombard, Julius B. Fleming Jr., Jarvis C. McInnis, Zita Nunes, Roberta Wolfson
About the Author
Gwen Bergner is Associate Professor of English at West Virginia University and author of Taboo Subjects: Race, Sex, and Psychoanalysis.
Zita Nunes is Associate Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of Maryland and author of Cannibal Democracy: Race and Representation in the Literature of the Americas.
Book Information
ISBN 9781478005186
Author Gwen Bergner
Format Paperback
Page Count 230
Imprint Duke University Press
Publisher Duke University Press