“A remarkable, almost epic book. Up from slavery and up from Slavdom: Dale Peterson focuses on comparable moments in the coming-to-consciousness of two ‘dark continents,’ the African and the Russian, where the stubborn fact of bondage for the many, a rich and conflicted dual identity for the educated few, and routine exclusion from the European mainstream as ‘non-historical peoples’ motivated a sophisticated intellectual odyssey that astonishes us afresh each time we rediscover it. <i>Up From Bondage</i> is an inspiration.”—Caryl Emerson, Princeton University

“Navigating the endless bounty of intellectual lapses and possibilities that reside in the gap between the West (qua ‘philosophy’) and the Rest (as <i>barbaros</i>, or racialized ‘outcasts’), Professor Peterson finds an accommodating comparative channel in similarities between African American and Slavic forms of intellectual, missionary, and cultural nationalisms. The result is one of those books one remembers as uncannily important, yoking together seemingly incompatible regions in interesting ways.”—Houston Baker, Duke University

During the nineteenth century, literate Russians and educated American blacks encountered a dominant Western narrative of world civilization that seemed to ignore the histories of Slavs and African Americans. In response, generations of Russian and black American intellectuals have asserted eloquent counterclaims for the cultural significance of a collective national “soul” veiled from prejudiced Western eyes. Up from Bondage is the first study to parallel the evolution of Russian and African American cultural nationalism in literary works and philosophical writings. Illuminating a remarkably widespread cross-pollination between the two cultural and intellectual traditions, Dale E. Peterson frames much of his argument around W. E. B. DuBois’s concept of “double-consciousness,” wherein members of an oppressed section of society view themselves simultaneously through their own self-awareness and through the internalized standards of the dominant culture. He shows how the writings of Dostoevsky, Hurston, Chesnutt, Turgenev, Ellison, Wright, Gorky, and Naylor—texts that enacted and described this sense of double awareness—were used both to perform and to contest the established genres of Western literacy. Woven through Peterson’s textual analyses is his consideration of cultural hybridism and its effects: The writers he examines find multiple ways to testify to and challenge the symptoms of postcolonial trauma. After discussing the strong and significant affinity expressed by contemporary African American cultural theorists for the dialogic thought of Russian linguist Mikhail Bakhtin, Peterson argues that a fuller appreciation of the historic connection between the two cultures will enrich the complicated meanings of being black or Russian in a world that has traditionally avoided acknowledging pluralistic standards of civilization and cultural excellence.This investigation of comparable moments in the development of Russian and African American ethnic self-consciousness will be valuable to students and scholars of comparative literature, philosophy, cultural theory, ethnicity, linguistics, and postcolonialism, in addition to Slavic and African American studies.
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During the 19th century, literate Russians and educated American blacks encountered a dominant Western narrative of world civilisation that seemed to ignore histories of Slavs and African Americans. This book presents the study to parallel evolution of Russian and African American cultural nationalism in literary works and philosophical writings.
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Acknowledgments Prologue:Justifying the Margin: The Cultural Construction of “Soul” 1. Civilizing the Race: The Missionary Nationalism of Chaadaev and Crummell 2. Conserving the Race: The Emergence of Cultural Nationalism 3. Notes from the Underworld: Dostoevsky, DuBois, and the Discovery of Ethnic “Soul” 4. Recovering the Native Tongue: Turgenev, Chesnutt, and Hurston 5. Underground Notes: Double-Voicedness and the Poetics of NationalIdentity 6. Native Sons Against Native Soul: Maxim Gorky and Richard Wright 7. Eurasians and New Negroes: The Invention of Multicultural Nationalism 8. Preserving the Race: Rasputin, Naylor, and the Mystique of Native “Soul” Epilogue:Response and Call: The African American Dialogue with Bakhtin Notes Selected Bibliography Index
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“A remarkable, almost epic book. Up from slavery and up from Slavdom: Dale Peterson focuses on comparable moments in the coming-to-consciousness of two ‘dark continents,’ the African and the Russian, where the stubborn fact of bondage for the many, a rich and conflicted dual identity for the educated few, and routine exclusion from the European mainstream as ‘non-historical peoples’ motivated a sophisticated intellectual odyssey that astonishes us afresh each time we rediscover it. Up From Bondage is an inspiration.”—Caryl Emerson, Princeton University
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The first systematic comparison of the emergence of cultural nationalism among Russian and African-American intellectuals in the post-emancipation era.

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780822325260
Publisert
2000-07-17
Utgiver
Vendor
Duke University Press
Vekt
794 gr
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Dale E. Peterson is Professor of English and Russian at Amherst College and Associate Editor of the Massachusetts Review.