Reading Africa into American Literature: Epics, Fables, and Gothic Tales

Front Cover
University Press of Kentucky, 2014 M10 17 - 280 pages

The literature often considered the most American is rooted not only in European and Western culture but also in African and American Creole cultures. Keith Cartwright places the literary texts of such noted authors as George Washington Cable, W.E.B. DuBois, Alex Haley, Zora Neale Hurston, Ralph Ellison, William Faulkner, Joel Chandler Harris, Herman Melville, Toni Morrison, and many others in the context of the history, spiritual traditions, folklore, music, linguistics, and politics out of which they were written.

Cartwright grounds his study of American writings in texts from the Senegambian/Old Mali region of Africa. Reading epics, fables, and gothic tales from the crossroads of this region and the American South, he reveals that America's foundational African presence, along with a complex set of reactions to it, is an integral but unacknowledged source of the national culture, identity, and literature.

 

Contents

Towards a Hippikat Poetics
1
Part I Epic ImpulsesNarratives of Ancestry
23
Part II Bound CulturesThe Creolization of Dixie
91
Part III Shadows of AfricansGothic Representations
155
Notes
231
Works Cited
241
Index
259
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2014)

Keith Cartwright, assistant professor of English at Roanoke College in Roanoke, Virginia, was a Peace Corps volunteer in Senegal.

Bibliographic information