Description
About the Author
Karen Ruth Kornweibel is associate professor of English in the Department of Literature and Language at East Tennessee State University.
Reviews
The comparative turn in American studies has allowed scholars to uncover the workings of identity formations across borders of nation and personhood, and to interrogate their common conceptions and assemblages, to use Alexander Weheylie's term. Kornweibel (East Tennessee State Univ.) follows in this vein as she studies the connections between race and national identity through a cross-cultural comparison of writers from Cuba and the US. She places fugitive slaves Juan Francisco Manzano and Frederick Douglass in dialogue along with post-slavery writers Martin Morua Delgado and Charles Chesnutt so that she can trace their arguments against racialization as a rationale for exclusion from national identities. Kornweibel is adept in discussing these authors' fictions and nonfiction writings and analyzing their use of language to symbolically express the social anxieties behind the lack of recognition afforded Afro-Cuban and African Americans in their respective lands, and to contest their placement as noncitizens and articulate their humanity as grounds for inclusion in their social arenas. Writing for Inclusion should appeal to scholars of African American and American studies for its engagement with race and nation across the diaspora. Summing Up: Recommended. Graduate students, researchers, faculty. * CHOICE *
Book Information
ISBN 9781683930976
Author Karen Ruth Kornweibel
Format Hardback
Page Count 174
Imprint Fairleigh Dickinson University Press
Publisher Fairleigh Dickinson University Press
Weight(grams) 440g
Dimensions(mm) 230mm * 159mm * 19mm