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From Slave Ship to Supermax: The Prisoner Abuse Narrative in Contemporary African American Fiction.

机译:从奴隶船到超级巨星:当代非裔美国人小说中的囚徒虐待叙事。

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摘要

Responding to African American literary criticism's recent engagements with contemporary U.S. imprisonment, From Slave Ship to Supermax traces the development of a heretofore un-theorized tradition in African American literature in which fiction writers bring to light the voice, critical thinking, and literary production of actual prisoner abuse survivors. This dissertation treats novelists James Baldwin, Toni Morrison, Charles Johnson, and Ernest Gaines as the contemporary prison's literary intermediaries, as writers whose fictional narratives of jailhouse beatings, rape and wounding on slave ships, and state-sponsored execution are inspired and haunted by the critically-unexamined abuse stories of late-twentieth century prisoners. Drawing from the field of African American literary theory, political prisoners' writings, as well as prisoners' low-circulating zines, journals, and pamphlets, I argue that the production and distribution of abuse narratives by African American fiction's captive characters illuminate the clandestine and insurgent literary practices of actual abused prisoners. This revelatory work accomplished by Baldwin, Morrison, Johnson, and Gaines demonstrates the radical utility of African American fiction at a moment in which prisoner abuse is widespread, underrepresented, and rarely documented in a way that affords the abused prisoner any measure of authorial control. In contradistinction to the victimization narratives that typify mainstream prisoner abuse stories, stories which appear in the human rights literature of advocacy organizations like Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International, this dissertation concludes that contemporary African American novelists emphasize the authorial control of abused captives and thus make apparent the rich complexities of their interior lives and the way in which the repressive spaces to which they are confined are also generative sites for reimagining the self and community.
机译:针对非裔美国文学批评最近与当代美国监狱的接触,《从奴隶船到超最大》追踪了非裔美国人文学迄今为止从未理论化的传统的发展,小说作家在其中揭示了声音,批判性思维和实际文学作品囚犯虐待幸存者。本文将小说家詹姆斯·鲍德温,托尼·莫里森,查尔斯·约翰逊和欧内斯特·盖恩斯视为当代监狱的文学中介,作为作家,其小说中关于殴打殴打,强奸和奴役奴隶的受伤以及国家资助的死刑的虚构叙事受到了作者的启发和困扰。二十世纪晚期囚犯的未经批判的虐待故事。我从非裔美国人文学理论,政治犯的著作以及囚犯的低发行量的杂志,期刊和小册子中汲取了经验,我认为非裔美国人小说的俘虏性人物对虐待叙事的产生和散布说明了秘密和实际虐待囚犯的叛乱文学习俗。鲍德温,莫里森,约翰逊和盖恩斯完成的这项启示性工作证明了非洲裔美国小说的激进效用,在这种情况下,囚犯的虐待现象普遍存在,代表性不足,而且很少有文献记载,这种方式可以使受虐囚犯获得任何形式上的控制。与代表主流囚犯虐​​待故事的受害叙述相反,这些故事出现在人权观察和国际特赦组织等倡导组织的人权文献中,论文得出的结论是,当代的非洲裔美国小说家强调对受虐俘虏的创作控制,因此显然,他们内部生活的复杂性以及他们所处的压迫性空间也是重新构想自我和社区的生成场所。

著录项

  • 作者

    Alexander, Patrick Elliot.;

  • 作者单位

    Duke University.;

  • 授予单位 Duke University.;
  • 学科 African American Studies.;Sociology Criminology and Penology.;Literature American.;Black Studies.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2012
  • 页码 231 p.
  • 总页数 231
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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