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The Power of Smell in American Literature: Odor, Affect, and Social Inequality - 69 (New Edition.)

Part of the Mainzer Studien zur Amerikanistik series
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Offering a thoroughly new approach to American literature, this book examines the literary representation of smell regarding its impact on establishing and subverting power structures. Although smell carries an enormous affective potential, it has been largely - but unjustly - overlooked in literary and cultural studies. Through her innovative close readings of works by authors such as Melville, Whitman, Equiano, Wilkins Freeman, Faulkner, Morrison, or Ellison, the author shows how smell stereotypes are used to discriminate against people and how odor references serve to undermine oppressive power structures. For this purpose, the author traces the cultural history of odor and combines insights from fields such as critical race, gender, intersectionality, trauma, and affect theories.

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£132.20
Product Details
Peter Lang
3653072328 / 9783653072327
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
12/01/2017
Germany
German
311 pages
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