Lexington Books
Pages: 266
Trim: 6¼ x 9
978-1-7936-3129-9 • Hardback • October 2020 • $123.00 • (£95.00)
978-1-7936-3130-5 • eBook • October 2020 • $45.00 • (£35.00)
Andrea Powell Wolfe teaches literature, composition, and humanities at Ball State University.
Introduction
Chapter 1: The Subordination of Embodied Power: Sentimental Representations of the Black Maternal Body in Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin and Harriet Jacobs’s Incidentsin the Life of a Slave Girl
Chapter 2: Recuperating the Body: Embodiment and Reintegration into the Black Community in Pauline Hopkins’s Contending Forces and Toni Morrison’s Beloved
Chapter 3: The Narrative Power of the Black Maternal Body: Resisting and Exceeding Visual Economies of Discipline in Margaret Walker’s Jubilee and Sherley Anne Williams’s Dessa Rose
Chapter 4: Mapping Black Motherhood onto the Nation: Southern Legacies and National Realities in Lillian Smith’s Strange Fruit and Alice Randall’s The Wind Done Gone
Coda: Michelle Obama in Context
References
Acknowledgements
About the Author
Sweeping and significant, Black Mothers and the Nation wields feminist analyses and nuanced discussions across historical periods and literary eras with gusto. It provides a much-needed assessment of how the black maternal body, as represented in canonical and countercanonical American literature by women, enacts, subverts, challenges, and reconfigures the values pinned to it by the problematic and enduring discursive forces of a nation deeply invested in the power dynamics pertaining to the constructions of black femininity. This unflinching and provocative book will be remembered and referenced long after it is read.
— Julie Goodspeed-Chadwick, Indiana University-Purdue University Columbus
Black Mothers and the Nation focuses on literary representations of motherhood as a way to track America’s foundational anti-Black, intersectional violence and its contemporary residue. Wolfe’s skillful literary analyses also remind readers that reclaiming Black motherhood is fundamental to dismantling the white-supremacist, patriarchal forces that continue to wreak havoc on Black lives
— Emily Ruth Rutter, Ball State University