Emotion, Race, and Space in Contemporary African American Literature

Author(s)
Mikić, Marijana
Collection
Austrian Science Fund (FWF)Language
EnglishAbstract
This open access book examines how selected African American authors—Colson Whitehead, Edward P. Jones, Toni Morrison, Brit Bennett, Percival Everett, Maurice Carlos Ruffin, Sherri L. Smith, and N.K. Jemisin—narrate relationships between emotion, race, and space. On the one hand, they bear witness to the structural production of Black emotional pain at the confluence of racial and spatial discrimination. On the other hand, they reveal meaningful and subversive interlinkages between Black emotional experiences and Black spatial practices. Weaving together insights from psychology, narrative theory, African American studies, affect theory, and Black Geographies, Marijana Mikić interrogates fear, hope, shame, guilt, anger, and grief in relation to the racial-geographic projects of slavery, Jim Crow segregation, and their continued legacies. Mikić draws attention to the narrative strategies contemporary African American authors employ to prompt their readers’ engagement with both the pain and the possibility that continues to shape Black lives in the twenty-first century.
Keywords
African American Literature; Emotion in Literature; Empathy; Race; Place; Black Geographies; Cognitive NarratologyISBN
9783031857959, 9783031857942Publisher
Springer NaturePublisher website
http://www.springernature.com/oabooksPublication date and place
Cham, 2025Grantor
Imprint
Palgrave MacmillanSeries
American Literature Readings in the 21st Century,Classification
Literary studies: c 1900 to c 2000
Literature: history and criticism
Social geography
Biography, Literature and Literary studies

