- Full Description
- More Information
- Author Biography
- Customer Reviews
Featuring original essays from an array of established and emerging scholars in the interdisciplinary field of African American studies, The Psychic Hold of Slavery offers a nuanced dialogue upon these questions. With a painful awareness that our understanding of the past informs our understanding of the present - and vice versa - the contributors place slavery's historical legacies in conversation with twenty-first-century manifestations of antiblack violence, dehumanization, and social death.
Through an exploration of film, drama, fiction, performance art, graphic novels, and philosophical discourse, this volume considers how artists grapple with questions of representation, as they ask whether slavery can ever be accurately depicted, trace the scars that slavery has left on a traumatized body politic, or debate how to best convey that black lives matter. The Psychic Hold of Slavery thus raises provocative questions about how we behold the historically distinct event of African diasporic enslavement and how we might hold off the transhistorical force of antiblack domination.
Illustrations | 14 photographs |
---|---|
Pages | 288 |
Dimensions | 229 x 152 |
Date Published | 30 Jul 2016 |
Publisher | Rutgers University Press |
Subject/s | Social groups   Social, group or collective psychology   Literary companions   Black & Asian studies   American Civil War   |
Robert J. Patterson is an associate professor of African American studies and English at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., USA where he also directs the African American Studies program. He is the author of Exodus Politics: Civil Rights and Leadership in African American Culture.
Aida Levy-Hussen is an assistant professor of English at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA. She is the author of the forthcoming book, How To Read African American Literature: Post - Civil Rights Fiction and the Task of Interpretation.