Full Description
Over the last five centuries, the story of the Americas has been a story of the mixing of races and cultures. Not surprisingly, the issue of miscegenation, with its attendant fears and hopes, has been a pervasive theme in New World literature, as writers from Canada to Argentina confront the legacy of cultural hybridization and fusion.
This book takes up the challenge of transforming American literary and cultural studies into a comparative discipline by examining the dynamics of racial and cultural mixture and its opposite tendency, racial and cultural disjunction, in the literatures of the Americas. Editors Kaup and Rosenthal have brought together a distinguished set of scholars who compare the treatment of racial and cultural mixtures in literature from North America, the Caribbean, and Latin America. From various angles, they remap the Americas as a multicultural and multiracial hemisphere, with a common history of colonialism, slavery, racism, and racial and cultural hybridity.
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
I. Mixed-Blood Epistemologies
1. Werner Sollors. Can Rabbits Have Interracial Sex?
2. Doris Sommer. Who Can Tell? The Blanks in Villaverde
3. Zita Nunes. Phantasmatic Brazil: Nella Larsen's Passing, American Literary Imagination, and Racial Utopianism
II. Métissage and Counterdiscourse
4. Françoise Lionnet. Narrating the Americas: Transcolonial Métissage and Maryse Condé's La Migration des coeurs
5. Michèle Praeger. Créolité or Ambiguity?
III. Indigenization, Miscegenation, and Nationalism
6. Priscilla Archibald. Gender and Mestizaje in the Andes
7. Debra J. Rosenthal. Race Mixture and the Representation of Indians in the U.S. and the Andes: Cumandá, Aves sin nido, The Last of the Mohicans, and Ramona
8. Susan Gillman, The Squatter, the Don, and the Grandissimes in Our America
IV. Hybrid Hybridity
9. Rafael Pérez-Torres. Chicano Ethnicity, Cultural Hybridity, and the Mestizo Voice
10. Monika Kaup. Constituting Hybridity as Hybrid: Métis Canadian and Mexican American Formations
V. Sites of Memory in Mixed-Race Autobiography
11. Rolando Hinojosa-Smith, Living on the River
12. Louis Owens. The Syllogistic Mixedblood: How Roland Barthes Saved Me from the indians
Coda: From Exoticism to Mixed-Blood Humanism
13. Earl E. Fitz. From Blood to Culture: Miscegenation as Metaphor for the Americas
Contributors
Works Cited
Index