Coalition Literature: Aesthetics on the Move in Midcentury US Multiethnic Writing (Post*45)

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Management number 231953524 Release Date 2026/06/18 List Price $13.10 Model Number 231953524
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In a series of incisive readings, Francisco E. Robles provides a literary history of midcentury US multiethnic literature, tracing the shift from coalitional aesthetics to multiculturalism by focusing on how migrancy and labor politics shape literary innovation. Along the way, Robles shows how writers kept the Popular Front's legacy of coalitional aesthetics alive through literary practices of what he calls speaking with, whereby authors undo their authority as scribes, audiences become participatory interpreters, and texts emerge as places of communal and collaborative work. Beginning with significant, unexpected connections between Zora Neale Hurston and Muriel Rukeyser, and delving deeply into the work of Sanora Babb, Woody Guthrie, Gwendolyn Brooks, poets of the Memphis Sanitation Strike, Carlos Bulosan, Tomás Rivera, and authors included in This Bridge Called My Back, Robles examines texts whose range of experimental strategies deliberately engage figurations of movement, migration, and coalition. The experimentation these works display emerges from the particular methods of speaking with that they contain, whether it's overcoming exclusion by finding new ways of representing migrants through word and sound, or in the astonishing ways these authors conceive of migrancy as neither static nor statistical but as a modality that necessitates writerly innovation. The result is a genealogy of coalitional aesthetics as a significantly important branch of American midcentury multiethnic writing that sustained and indeed extended the Popular Front and its legacies. Read more

ASIN B0DT1K8YMN
XRay Not Enabled
ISBN13 978-1503641976
Edition 1st
Language English
File size 6.8 MB
Page Flip Enabled
Publisher Stanford University Press
Word Wise Enabled
Print length 278 pages
Accessibility Learn more
Screen Reader Supported
Part of series Post*45
Publication date March 11, 2025
Enhanced typesetting Enabled

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