Black Prometheus: Race and Radicalism in the Age of Atlantic Slavery
Autor Jared Hickmanen Limba Engleză Paperback – 21 iun 2020
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190077792
ISBN-10: 0190077794
Pagini: 544
Dimensiuni: 231 x 155 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.79 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0190077794
Pagini: 544
Dimensiuni: 231 x 155 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.79 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
In this meticulous treatment, the well-known story of Prometheus becomes the basis for an extensive allegorical and historical investigation into the transatlantic slave trade. Hickman (English, Johns Hopkins Univ.) shrewdly chooses the metaphor, which undergirds the self-referential mythology of European expansionism, subverting it to provide a surprisingly different outlook when moved from identification with the oppressors to identification with the oppressed. ... the idea itself is interesting and fresh ... He shines in matters of literary interpretation and cultural resonance ... The concluding part (of four), "A Literary History of Slave Rebellion," is inspired ... Of most value to scholars of literary theory. ... Summing Up: Recommended. Graduate students, researchers, faculty.
Black Prometheus is an exhilarating account of modernity as neither secular nor religious but comprised of a series of competing, fragile, and often flawed experiments in being human. In tending to the globalizing and racializing effects of these cosmic wagers in history and in literature, Jared Hickman writes with joyous erudition across an impressive range of debates, texts, and events. In doing so, Hickman offers nothing less than a counter-myth to the 'bad feedback loop' of European Christianity and its momentous mélange of faith and reason, immanent frames and transcendental claims, enchained bodies and wills to cognitive autonomy.
Setting a new standard for postsecular scholarship, Black Prometheus rewrites modernity's global cosmology by focusing on Atlantic slavery in the misnamed New World. Here, race-making is theological warfare and the myths that service it are as powerful as scripture. Part philosophy, part literary criticism, part anti-racist critique, Black Prometheus dismantles the secularization thesis of modernity to devastating effect. It is impossible to imagine how Jared Hickman could have written a better book.
Black Prometheus is an ambitious and learned study. Arcing from Aeschylus to the Shelleys, from Banneker to Byron and Douglass to DuBois, Jared Hickman discloses our finite globe as the theater of titanic — and fundamentally racial — struggle. Like a powerful magnet, the ancient figure of Prometheus draws to it over the centuries a dizzying array of metacosmic speculation. Projecting Blumenberg's insights onto a global scale, Hickman here offers an unusual look at what 'work on myth' can be today.
An exciting, lucid reframing of the interactions between North American and Latin American literatures over the course of the past two centuries, Anxieties of Experience shows the critical and conceptual gains to be made from rethinking the hemispheric through the lens of world literature. Moving nimbly between close analysis and distant views to map the shifting, dialogic, dialectical relation between literatures north and south, the book's central concern and achievement is to reboot and reorient hemispheric literary studies; stowed-away in its coda is a thrilling supplement, a mapping of an entirely new scene of the contemporary. Lawrence's is a witty, incisive, eloquent new voice in literary and cultural criticism.
Anxieties of Experience offers an exceptionally bold and mind-expanding reconnaissance of the counterpoint and interweave between distinctive traditions of U. S. and Latin American literary thought and practice over the past two centuries. Anyone seriously interested in the past, the present, and the likely future of 'hemispheric literature' will want to read this book from start to finish.
A massively erudite and elegantly written book, Anxieties of Experience takes its readers on a hemispheric journey through modern times, leading up to the present. Comparing and contrasting the literatures of North and South America is ultimately, for Lawrence, a means of examining whether a bookish life is a life lived to the fullest. With its sustained line of inquiry across corpora, the volume makes a valuable contribution to several fields of study-while also introducing general readers to hemispheric studies.
Black Prometheus is an ambitious and learned study. Arcing from Aeschylus to the Shelleys, from Banneker to Byron and Douglass to DuBois, Jared Hickman discloses our finite globe as the theater of titanic
Black Prometheus is an exhilarating account of modernity as neither secular nor religious but comprised of a series of competing, fragile, and often flawed experiments in being human. In tending to the globalizing and racializing effects of these cosmic wagers in history and in literature, Jared Hickman writes with joyous erudition across an impressive range of debates, texts, and events. In doing so, Hickman offers nothing less than a counter-myth to the 'bad feedback loop' of European Christianity and its momentous mélange of faith and reason, immanent frames and transcendental claims, enchained bodies and wills to cognitive autonomy.
Setting a new standard for postsecular scholarship, Black Prometheus rewrites modernity's global cosmology by focusing on Atlantic slavery in the misnamed New World. Here, race-making is theological warfare and the myths that service it are as powerful as scripture. Part philosophy, part literary criticism, part anti-racist critique, Black Prometheus dismantles the secularization thesis of modernity to devastating effect. It is impossible to imagine how Jared Hickman could have written a better book.
Black Prometheus is an ambitious and learned study. Arcing from Aeschylus to the Shelleys, from Banneker to Byron and Douglass to DuBois, Jared Hickman discloses our finite globe as the theater of titanic — and fundamentally racial — struggle. Like a powerful magnet, the ancient figure of Prometheus draws to it over the centuries a dizzying array of metacosmic speculation. Projecting Blumenberg's insights onto a global scale, Hickman here offers an unusual look at what 'work on myth' can be today.
An exciting, lucid reframing of the interactions between North American and Latin American literatures over the course of the past two centuries, Anxieties of Experience shows the critical and conceptual gains to be made from rethinking the hemispheric through the lens of world literature. Moving nimbly between close analysis and distant views to map the shifting, dialogic, dialectical relation between literatures north and south, the book's central concern and achievement is to reboot and reorient hemispheric literary studies; stowed-away in its coda is a thrilling supplement, a mapping of an entirely new scene of the contemporary. Lawrence's is a witty, incisive, eloquent new voice in literary and cultural criticism.
Anxieties of Experience offers an exceptionally bold and mind-expanding reconnaissance of the counterpoint and interweave between distinctive traditions of U. S. and Latin American literary thought and practice over the past two centuries. Anyone seriously interested in the past, the present, and the likely future of 'hemispheric literature' will want to read this book from start to finish.
A massively erudite and elegantly written book, Anxieties of Experience takes its readers on a hemispheric journey through modern times, leading up to the present. Comparing and contrasting the literatures of North and South America is ultimately, for Lawrence, a means of examining whether a bookish life is a life lived to the fullest. With its sustained line of inquiry across corpora, the volume makes a valuable contribution to several fields of study-while also introducing general readers to hemispheric studies.
Black Prometheus is an ambitious and learned study. Arcing from Aeschylus to the Shelleys, from Banneker to Byron and Douglass to DuBois, Jared Hickman discloses our finite globe as the theater of titanic
Notă biografică
Jared Hickman is Associate Professor of English at Johns Hopkins University.