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Black Heart

The Moral Life of Recent African American Letters

by Phillip M. Richards (Author)
©2006 Textbook 252 Pages

Summary

Black Heart is a provocative and polemical critique of African American literary studies at the beginning of the twenty-first century. Through a series of sharp and insightful essays on a wide range of critical thinkers, Phillip M. Richards traces what he sees as an erosion of moral reflection in African American literary culture – a process that has left contemporary black academic criticism socially, politically, and culturally hollow. Exploring the work of Henry Louis Gates, Jr., Michael Dyson, Karla Holloway and others, Black Heart sets forth the rhetorical strategies of present-day African American critical writing, and probes the ethical dimensions of its institutional life in the academy, the media, and the public sphere. Richards undertakes to recover the procedures by which cultural and moral value may be recovered for black literary culture and to establish the possibilities for a new humanism in African American writing and literary culture.

Details

Pages
252
Year
2006
ISBN (Softcover)
9780820471228
Language
English
Keywords
USA Literatur Ethik (Motiv) Schwarze Geschichte 1990-2005 Moral Life African American Letter
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, Oxford, Wien, 2006. 252 pp.

Biographical notes

Phillip M. Richards (Author)

The Author: Phillip M. Richards is Associate Professor in the Department of English at Colgate University in Hamilton, New York. He received a Ph.D. in English and American literature from the University of Chicago. His scholarship, literary criticism, and journalism have been published in a number of professional journals and magazines.

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Title: Black Heart