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Black Folklore and the Politics of Racial Representation

Part of the Margaret Walker Alexander Series in African American Studies series
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Before the innovative work of Zora Neale Hurston, folklorists from the Hampton Institute collected, studied, and wrote about African American folklore.

Like Hurston, these folklorists worked within but also beyond the bounds of white mainstream institutions.

They often called into question the meaning of the very folklore projects in which they were engaged. Shirley Moody-Turner analyzes this output, along with the contributions of a disparate group of African American authors and scholars.

She explores how black authors and folklorists were active participants--rather than passive observers--in conversations about the politics of representing black folklore.

Examining literary texts, folklore documents, cultural performances, legal discourse, and political rhetoric, Black Folklore and the Politics of Racial Representation demonstrates how folklore studies became a battleground across which issues of racial identity and difference were asserted and debated at the turn of the twentieth century.

The study is framed by two questions of historical and continuing import.

What role have representations of black folklore played in constructing racial identity? And, how have those ideas impacted the way African Americans think about and creatively engage black traditions?Moody-Turner renders established historical facts in a new light and context, taking figures we thought we knew--such as Charles Chesnutt, Anna Julia Cooper, and Paul Laurence Dunbar--and recasting their place in African American intellectual and cultural history.

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Product Details
1617038857 / 9781617038853
Hardback
30/10/2013
United States
192 pages, 6 black & white photographs
152 x 229 mm, 497 grams