Narcisi’s engaging study places novels by women of color into conversation with one another and with the larger traditions that surround them to establish a reading method that promotes the idea of “radical empathy” as a basis for cultural exchange. Through perceptive analyses of texts by Celeste Ng, Maxine Hong Kingston, Toni Morrison, Jesmyn Ward, Sandra Cisneros, and Kali Fajardo-Anstine, Narcisi presents the idea of literary influence as a relation not only between author and author, but also author and reader. This book will appeal to all readers who care about U.S. multiculturalism and the powerful fiction it has produced.
— Cyrus R.K. Patell
What do we gain from reading intertextually--“across and between” novels, as Narcisi writes—from seeing works of literature as part of a rich, meaningful conversation? Wide-ranging, accessible, provocative, and unabashedly feminocentric, Radical Empathy makes a strong argument for the importance of resisting a “single story,” for an American canon that is always and truly multiethnic, and ultimately, for the power of fiction to change hearts and minds.
— Karen E. H. Skinazi, University of Bristol; author of "Women of Valor: Orthodox Jewish Troll Fighters, Crime Writers, and Rock Stars in Contemporary Literature and Culture"
A love letter to literature, Radical Empathy in Multicultural Women’s Fiction draws together cross-generational readings of multicultural women’s writing with theoretical insights from Crenshaw, Kristeva, and Adichie to renew our hope in the radical potential of literature and literary criticism. Narcisi not only mines these texts for the literary influences that forged them but demonstrate their potential to speak to future readers, authors, and activists. By renewing our hope in literature’s ability to help us engage empathically with social justice issues both within and beyond our own limited subject positions, Radical Empathy makes a strong case for the necessity of the humanities in the twenty-first century.
— Mollie Godfrey, James Madison University; editor of Conversations with Lorraine Hansberry