Balancing the Books: Faulkner, Morrison and the Economies of SlaveryRoutledge, 24 mai 2013 - 172 pages Balancing the Books represents a sophisticated examination of the ongoing engagement of American literature with the economies of slavery through the works of William Faulkner and Toni Morrison. Both Faulkner and Morrison write about the relationship between race, identity, and history, and about how the legacies of slavery linger in the lives and actions of their characters, although the narrative strategies through which they render these themes ultimately diverge. Dussere brings considerations of debt and repayment, exchange and accounting, and capital and the market-concepts inseparable from any consideration of race in the construction of the American nation-into dialogue with the work of Faulkner and Morrison to produce an outstanding work of literary and cultural criticism. |
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Page 3
... Faulkner as the central influence . In fact , they both assert this influence as something self - evident — Bloom ends by simply quoting passages from three of Morrison's novels , inviting us to hear the echo of Faulkner . Since Bloom ...
... Faulkner as the central influence . In fact , they both assert this influence as something self - evident — Bloom ends by simply quoting passages from three of Morrison's novels , inviting us to hear the echo of Faulkner . Since Bloom ...
Page 4
Faulkner, Morrison and the Economies of Slavery Erik Dussere. This reinvention of " Faulkner " is certainly being done to an impressive degree through the connection to Morrison . But our critical moment has its own dangers . In his 1991 ...
Faulkner, Morrison and the Economies of Slavery Erik Dussere. This reinvention of " Faulkner " is certainly being done to an impressive degree through the connection to Morrison . But our critical moment has its own dangers . In his 1991 ...
Page 6
... Faulkner for that matter , to teach , write on , or proclaim their authority in matters relating to African American literature " ( 365 ) . McKay's pointed addition of Faulkner to the list is no accident ; the danger she describes here ...
... Faulkner for that matter , to teach , write on , or proclaim their authority in matters relating to African American literature " ( 365 ) . McKay's pointed addition of Faulkner to the list is no accident ; the danger she describes here ...
Page 7
Faulkner, Morrison and the Economies of Slavery Erik Dussere. ure brought about by isolation " ( 25 ) . In Morrison's reading , Faulkner's novels place the greatest value on codes and ordering principles of the past , and the Faulknerian ...
Faulkner, Morrison and the Economies of Slavery Erik Dussere. ure brought about by isolation " ( 25 ) . In Morrison's reading , Faulkner's novels place the greatest value on codes and ordering principles of the past , and the Faulknerian ...
Page 8
... Faulkner's desperate , compelling novels are pro- duced out of an exasperation at being unable to escape the ... Faulkner- ian mode , Morrison works to imagine a narrative that brings the force of the past to bear on the present and yet ...
... Faulkner's desperate , compelling novels are pro- duced out of an exasperation at being unable to escape the ... Faulkner- ian mode , Morrison works to imagine a narrative that brings the force of the past to bear on the present and yet ...
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Balancing the Books: Faulkner, Morrison and the Economies of Slavery Erik Dussere Aperçu limité - 2013 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
Absalom accounting action African American American appears argues assertion attempt Baby balance Bear becomes begins Beloved blood body called central chapter characters Charles claim clear concerns connection construction create critical culture danger dead debt defined described discussion economic essay exchange experience fact father Faulkner female fiction figure final force Gavin gender give honor human identity imagine insists interest issues kind land language ledger linked literary lives look Lucas male mark meaning memory Morrison move narrative narrator never novels objects past possible present problem provides question race racial reading relation relationship represented seems seen sexuality slave slavery social South Southern story structure suggests takes telling themes things thinking throughout tion town tradition trying turn ultimately woman women writing written