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American Babel : Literatures of the United States from Abnaki to Zuni

Shell, Marc(Edited by)
Part of the Harvard English Studies series
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If ever there was a polyglot place on the globe (other than the Tower of Babel), America between 1750 and 1850 was it.

Here three continents - North America, Africa, and Europe - met and spoke not as one, but in Amerindian and African languages, in German and English, Spanish, French, and Dutch.

How this prodigious multilingualism lost its voice in the making of the American canon and in everyday American linguistic practice is the problem this volume approaches from a variety of angles.

Looking at the first Arabic-language African-American slave narrative, at quirks of translation in Greek-American bilingual books, and at the strategies of Yiddish women poets and Welsh-American dramatists, contributors show how linguistic resistance opposes the imperative of linguistic assimilation.

They address matters of literary authority in Irish Gaelic writing, Creole novels, and the multiple voices of the Zuni storyteller; and in essays on Haitian, Welsh, Spanish, and Chinese literatures, they trace the relationship between domestic nationalism and immigrant internationalism, between domestic citizenship and immigrant ethnicity.

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Product Details
Harvard University Press
0674006615 / 9780674006614
Paperback / softback
23/09/2002
United States
English
480 p. : ill.
24 cm
postgraduate /research & professional /undergraduate Learn More