Offers a new framework for understanding Du Bois's poetics and
politics, including the concept of double consciousness, by tracing
the trope of the cross-caste romance across his fiction. Tales from Du
Bois brings together critical race theory, queer studies, philosophy,
and genre theory to offer an illuminating new comprehensive study of
W. E. B. Du Bois's fiction from 1903–1928. Erika Renée Williams
begins by revisiting Du Bois's tale of being rebuffed by a white
female classmate in The Souls of Black Folk, identifying it as a
failure of what she calls "cross-caste romance"-a sentimental,
conjugal, or erotic relation projected across lines of cultural
difference. In Du Bois's text, this failure figures as the cause of
double consciousness, the experience of looking at oneself through the
eyes of others. Far from being unique to Souls, the trope of
cross-caste romance, Williams argues, structures much of Du Bois's
literary oeuvre. With it, Du Bois queries romance's capacity to ground
nationalism, on the one hand, and to foment queer forms of
Afro-Diasporic reclamation and kinship, on the other. Beautifully
written and deftly argued, Tales from Du Bois analyzes familiar works
like Souls and Dark Princess alongside neglected short fiction to make
a case for the value of Du Bois's literary writing and its centrality
to his thought more broadly.
Les mer
The Queer Intimacy of Cross-Caste Romance
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781438488202
Publisert
2021
Utgiver
State University of New York Press (SUNY Press)
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter