Loading...

Eating the Black Body

Miscegenation as Sexual Consumption in African American Literature and Culture

by Carlyle V. Thompson (Author)
©2006 Textbook XIV, 231 Pages

Summary

In this provocative and original exploration of racial subjugation and its aftermath, Carlyle Van Thompson illumines the racialized sexual desire that reduces Black people to commodities for consumption. Eating the Black Body examines the often-sadistic forms of sexual violence during the period of slavery and its aftermath. By looking at one poem and three novels – Richard Wright’s Between the World and Me, John Oliver Killens’ Youngblood, Gayl Jones’ Corregidora, and Octavia Butler’s Kindred – that examine slavery and the Jim Crow period, Thompson investigates a wide variety of Black bodies as sites of miscegenation and sexual desire. Thompson also examines a horrific case of White male police brutality in New York City in which a Black man was sodomized. Bold and persuasively argued, Eating the Black Body will engage readers in a broad range of literary, historical, and cultural studies.

Details

Pages
XIV, 231
Year
2006
ISBN (Softcover)
9780820479316
Language
English
Keywords
USA Literatur Sexueller Missbrauch (Motiv) Schwarze miscegenation sexual violence lynching consumption Geschichte 1945-1991 American literature
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, Oxford, Wien, 2006. XIV, 231 pp.

Biographical notes

Carlyle V. Thompson (Author)

The Author: Carlyle Van Thompson is Associate Professor of African American and American literature at Medgar Evers College, the City University of New York. He received his Ph.D. in English and comparative literature from Columbia University. He is the author of The Tragic Black Buck: Racial Masquerading in the American Literary Imagination (Peter Lang, 2004), as well as numerous articles in professional journals and book reviews.

Previous

Title: Eating the Black Body