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White Amnesia - Black Memory?

American Women's Writing and History

by Sabine Bröck (Author)
©1999 Postdoctoral Thesis 200 Pages

Summary

Reading a series of prose texts by 20th century white women writers ranging from The Making of Americans to Civil Wars this study interrogates a correlation between authors' subject positions as white and their textual investments in American history. It displaces the diffuse acceptance of whiteness as a given property by foregrounding it as a shared, and unquestioned feature of the white reader's and the text's consciousness. To trace the literary legacies of white amnesia about the Middle Passage is an urgent response to white women writers' participation in US-American historical mythology. At a point of convergence of Black Studies, American Studies and Gender Studies this investigation results in a profound denaturalization of what American history and American cultural memory may signify.

Details

Pages
200
Year
1999
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631335451
Language
English
Published
Frankfurt/M., Berlin, Bern, New York, Paris, Wien, 1999. 200 pp.

Biographical notes

Sabine Bröck (Author)

The Author: A graduate of Frankfurt University, Sabine Bröck received her habilitation from Humboldt-University, Berlin with, White Amnesia. Presently she teaches American Studies at the University of Bremen.

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Title: White Amnesia - Black Memory?