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Paris, Capital of the Black Atlantic Jeremy Braddock (Associate Professor, Cornell University)

Paris, Capital of the Black Atlantic By Jeremy Braddock (Associate Professor, Cornell University)

Paris, Capital of the Black Atlantic by Jeremy Braddock (Associate Professor, Cornell University)


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Summary

Paris, Capital of the Black Atlantic is unique both in its focus on literary fiction as a formal and sociological category and in the range of examples it brings to bear on the question of Paris as an imaginary capital of diasporic consciousness.

Paris, Capital of the Black Atlantic Summary

Paris, Capital of the Black Atlantic: Literature, Modernity, and Diaspora by Jeremy Braddock (Associate Professor, Cornell University)

Paris has always fascinated and welcomed writers. Throughout the twentieth and into the twenty-first century, writers of American, Caribbean, and African descent were no exception. Paris, Capital of the Black Atlantic considers the travels made to Paris-whether literally or imaginatively-by black writers. These collected essays explore the transatlantic circulation of ideas, texts, and objects to which such travels to Paris contributed. Editors Jeremy Braddock and Jonathan P. Eburne expand upon an acclaimed special issue of the journal Modern Fiction Studies with four new essays and a revised introduction. Beginning with W. E. B. Du Bois's trip to Paris in 1900 and ending with the contemporary state of diasporic letters in the French capital, this collection embraces theoretical close readings, materialist intellectual studies of networks, comparative essays, and writings at the intersection of literary and visual studies. Paris, Capital of the Black Atlantic is unique both in its focus on literary fiction as a formal and sociological category and in the range of examples it brings to bear on the question of Paris as an imaginary capital of diasporic consciousness.

About Jeremy Braddock (Associate Professor, Cornell University)

Jeremy Braddock is an associate professor of English at Cornell University and the author of Collecting as Modernist Practice, also published by Johns Hopkins. Jonathan P. Eburne is the Josephine Berry Weiss Early Career Professor in the Humanities and an associate professor of comparative literature and English at Pennsylvania State University. He is the author of Surrealism and the Art of Crime.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I: Afro-Modernism
Chapter 1. Cultural Artifacts and the Narrative of History: W. E. B. Du Bois and the Exhibiting of Culture at the 1900 Paris Exposition Universelle
Chapter 2. The Only Real White Democracy and the Language of Liberation: The Great War, France, and African American Culture in the 1920s
Chapter 3. No One, I Am Sure, Is Ever Homesick in Paris: Jessie Fauset's French Imaginary
Chapter 4. Writing Home: Comparative Black Modernism and Form in Jean Toomer and Aime Cesaire
Chapter 5. Embodied Fictions, Melancholy Migrations: Josephine Baker's Cinematic Celebrity
Part II: Postwar Paris and the Politics of Literature
Chapter 6. Assuming the Position: Fugitivity and Futurity in the Work of Chester Himes
Chapter 7. One Is Mysteriously Shipwrecked Forever, in the Great New World: James Baldwin from New York to Paris
Chapter 8. Making Culture Capital: Presence Africaine and Diasporic Modernity in Post-World War II Paris
Chapter 9. Richard Wright's Island of Hallucination and the Gibson Affair
Chapter 10. Entering the Politics of the Outside: Richard Wright's Critique of Marxism and Existentialism
Part III: From Negritude to Migritude
Chapter 11. Rene, Louis, and Leopold: Senghorian Negritude as a Black Humanism
Chapter 12. Nos Ancetres, les Diallobes: Cheikh Hamidou Kane's Ambiguous Adventure and the Paradoxes of Islamic Negritude
Chapter 13. Redefining Paris: Transmodernity and Francophone African Migritude Fiction
Chapter 14. Interurban Paris: Alain Mabanckou's Invisible Cities
Afterword: Europhilia, Francophilia, Negrophilia in the Making of Modernism
List of Contributors
Index

Additional information

NLS9781421407791
9781421407791
1421407795
Paris, Capital of the Black Atlantic: Literature, Modernity, and Diaspora by Jeremy Braddock (Associate Professor, Cornell University)
New
Paperback
Johns Hopkins University Press
2013-05-27
376
N/A
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