The Locator -- [(subject = "African Americans--Intellectual life")]

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Author:
Brooks, John, 1989- author.
Title:
The racial unfamiliar : illegibility in Black literature and culture / John Brooks.
Publisher:
Columbia University Press,
Copyright Date:
2022
Description:
xi, 287 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm.
Subject:
American literature--History and criticism.--History and criticism.
African American art--21st century.
African Americans--Race identity.
Race in literature.
Race in art.
African Americans in literature.
African Americans in art.
African Americans--Intellectual life--21st century.
Art noir américain--21e siècle.
Noirs américains--Identité ethnique.
Race dans la littérature.
Race dans l'art.
Noirs américains dans la littérature.
Noirs américains dans l'art.
Noirs américains--Vie intellectuelle--21e siècle.
African American art.
African Americans in art.
African Americans in literature.
African Americans--Intellectual life.
African Americans--Race identity.
American literature--African American authors.
Race in art.
Race in literature.
2000-2099
Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Literary criticism.
Literary criticism.
Critiques littéraires.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Summary:
"Through what strategies might contemporary artists confront cultural assumptions about race? In what ways can the devices that make race feel familiar-such as stereotypes or strategic essentialism-be used to make race feel unfamiliar? What new perspectives might emerge out of such disorienting confrontations? In The Racial Unfamiliar, John Brooks argues that twenty-first-century African American artists have turned to abstractionist aesthetics to complicate and illuminate how we think and see race. Brooks shows that established categories of cultural production-such as "African American art" or "Black history"-reproduce familiar but confining ideas about race, and that some audiences assume such ideas reflect a "truth" about Black identity or Black experience in the United States. Instead of countering representations of race with "authentic" portrayals of African American identity and experience, recent artists have begun exaggerating and overemphasizing them. By inflating and abstracting clichéd representations and stereotypes, these artists expose the incongruities that underlie racist attitudes and refute the idea that any single African American experience exists to be represented. Through the production of illegible misrepresentations of a multitude of black experiences, the literary and visual works considered in this book insist that blackness exceeds categorical representation. Brooks traces the disorienting effects of this experimental aesthetic through a broad array of recent artworks, from novels and plays by Percival Everett and Suzan-Lori Parks to photography by Roy DeCarava and installation art by Kara Walker, to show how contemporary African American cultural production can be understood as an operation in abstracting and upending the cultural determinants that make racial Blackness intelligible"-- Provided by publisher.
Series:
Literature now
ISBN:
0231205031
9780231205030
0231205023
9780231205023
OCLC:
(OCoLC)1287922221
LCCN:
2021057279
Locations:
UNUX074 -- University of Northern Iowa - Rod Library (Cedar Falls)

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