University Press of America
Pages: 194
Trim: 6 x 9¼
978-0-7618-4184-5 • Paperback • October 2008 • $55.99 • (£43.00)
Tomeiko Ashford Carter is Interim Director of the Institute of African American Research at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Chapter 1 1 "Imaginative" Narrations of Divine Power: Zilpha Elaw, Black Feminist Spiritual Autobiography, and Literary Tradition
Chapter 2 2 Bridging Literary Divides: The Auto/Fictional Spirit-Writings of Harriet Wilson, Frances E. W. Harper, and Alice Dunbar-Nelson
Chapter 3 3 Embodiments of Theology: Divinity and Maternal Surrogacy
Chapter 4 4 "Standing in the Gap": Intercession, Fractured Womanist Identity, and Healing
Chapter 5 5 The Spiritual "Other": Marginalized Black Feminist Religiosity
Chapter 6 6 Sacred Cosmologies: Theology, Womanism, and Globalism Meet the Science-Fiction World
Chapter 7 7 A Look Toward Divine Female Characterizations by Black Male Writers
Powers Divine provides a much-needed contribution to black literary studies by exploring the trajectory of the 'divine black heroine.' Delving into little-known nineteenth-century spiritual autobiographies—and the oral traditions that sustained them—Carter identifies textual foundations of contemporary black feminist fiction. In acknowledging the peculiar resonance of black women's divine writings for their twentieth-century daughters and sons, Carter puts forth her own "call and response": a call to readers to acknowledge and respond themselves to traditions that continue to speak powerfully today in black women's fiction.
— Susan Candace Ward, author of Desire and Disorder: Fever, Fictions, and Feeling in English Georgian Culture (2007)
Exploring the literary works of African American women from slavery to the present, Carter weaves together a thoughtful and compelling analysis of the power of the Divine in black women's narrative. Carter's command of literature and appreciation of the subject make Powers Divine a phenomenal read!
— Marla Frederick, author of Between Sundays: Black Women and Everyday Struggles of Faith (2003)
Combining meticulous attention to historical detail with theoretical verve, Powers Divine presents arguments that are supple, innovative, and utterly compelling. Carter introduces us to new voices of black women writers while also enabling us to hear familiar voices in new ways. With her far-ranging and generically diverse focus, she persuasively makes the case for reinterpreting the African American literary canon, particularly the relationship of spiritual autobiography to contemporary spiritual fiction. Powers Divine breaks down traditional understandings of literary and historical periodization quite productively.
— Nancy Bradley Warren, author of Women of God and Arms: Female Spirituality and Political Conflict, 1380-1600 (2005)