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Memory, Narrative, and Identity

New Essays in Ethnic American Literatures

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  • 352pagine
  • 13 ore di lettura

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This volume presents fourteen insightful essays exploring how ethnic American writers utilize memory to redefine history and culture, validate personal and collective identities, and shape narratives. Contributors examine the works of diverse writers from African, Mexican, Irish, Chinese, South Asian, Jewish, and Native American backgrounds, highlighting memory's impact on language, narrative, and identity. The essays reflect on the cultural and political realities of race and ethnicity in America, emphasizing the identity crisis faced by hyphenated Americans. The discussions delve into cultural memory, considering historical conditions, hegemonic discourses, and variations in gender, class, and region. Some essays focus on individual writers, while others adopt a comparative lens or draw from disciplines like anthropology and semiotics. Rather than systematically covering major ethnic writers, the collection showcases a range of provocative approaches to studying memory's traces in language and narrative. The editors' introduction offers a retrospective on how race and ethnicity have become central to contemporary literary debates. Overall, these critical essays engage with memory, narrative, and cultural politics, examining how time and orality validate historical and narrative experiences, while also exploring how immigrant or racial memory influences language and consciousness, enriching our understanding of imagination an

Acquisto del libro

Memory, Narrative, and Identity, Amritjit Singh, Joseph T. Skerrett, Jr., Robert E. Hogan

Lingua
Pubblicato
1994
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(Copertina rigida),
Condizioni del libro
Danneggiato
Prezzo
1,74 €

Metodi di pagamento

Titolo
Memory, Narrative, and Identity
Sottotitolo
New Essays in Ethnic American Literatures
Lingua
Inglese
Pubblicato
1994
Formato
Copertina rigida
Pagine
352
ISBN10
1555532039
ISBN13
9781555532031
Serie
Descrizione
This volume presents fourteen insightful essays exploring how ethnic American writers utilize memory to redefine history and culture, validate personal and collective identities, and shape narratives. Contributors examine the works of diverse writers from African, Mexican, Irish, Chinese, South Asian, Jewish, and Native American backgrounds, highlighting memory's impact on language, narrative, and identity. The essays reflect on the cultural and political realities of race and ethnicity in America, emphasizing the identity crisis faced by hyphenated Americans. The discussions delve into cultural memory, considering historical conditions, hegemonic discourses, and variations in gender, class, and region. Some essays focus on individual writers, while others adopt a comparative lens or draw from disciplines like anthropology and semiotics. Rather than systematically covering major ethnic writers, the collection showcases a range of provocative approaches to studying memory's traces in language and narrative. The editors' introduction offers a retrospective on how race and ethnicity have become central to contemporary literary debates. Overall, these critical essays engage with memory, narrative, and cultural politics, examining how time and orality validate historical and narrative experiences, while also exploring how immigrant or racial memory influences language and consciousness, enriching our understanding of imagination an