Reading Race Relationally
Embodied Dispositions and Social Structures in Colson Whitehead's Novels
Abstract
What does it mean to write African American literature after the end of legalized segregation? In this study of Colson Whitehead's first six novels, Marlon Lieber argues that this question has permeated the Pulitzer Prize-winning author's writing since his 1999 debut The Intuitionist. Drawing on Pierre Bourdieu's relational sociology and Marxist critical theory, Lieber shows that Whitehead's oeuvre articulates the tension between the persistent presence of racism and transformations in the United States' class structure, which reveals new modes of abjection. At the same time, Whitehead imagines forms of writing that strive to transcend the histories of domination objectified in social structures and embodied in the form of habitus.
Keywords
American Studies; African American Literature; Race and Racism; Colson Whitehead; Pierre Bourdieu; Literature; America; Racism; Postcolonialism; Literary StudiesDOI
10.14361/9783839463468ISBN
9783839463468, 9783837663464, 9783839463468Publisher
transcript VerlagPublisher website
https://www.transcript-verlag.de/Publication date and place
2023Imprint
transcript VerlagSeries
Lettre,Classification
Literary studies: general
National liberation and independence