In the first comprehensive study of African American war literature, Jennifer James analyzes fiction, poetry, autobiography, and histories about the major wars waged before the desegregation of the U.S. military in 1948. Examining literature about the Civil War, the Spanish-American Wars, World War I, and World War II, James introduces a range of rare and understudied texts by writers such as Victor Daly, F. Grant Gilmore, William Gardner Smith, and Susie King Taylor. She argues that works by these as well as canonical writers such as William Wells Brown, Paul Laurence Dunbar, and Gwendolyn Brooks mark a distinctive contribution to African American letters.
In the first comprehensive study of African American war literature, Jennifer James analyzes fiction, poetry, autobiography, and histories about the major wars waged before the desegregation of the U.S. military in 1948. Examining literature about the Civil War, the Spanish-American Wars, World War I, and World War II, James introduces a range of rare and understudied texts by writers such as Victor Daly, F. Grant Gilmore, William Gardner Smith, and Susie King Taylor. She argues that works by these as well as canonical writers such as William Wells Brown, Paul Laurence Dunbar, and Gwendolyn Brooks mark a distinctive contribution to African American letters. In establishing African American war literature as a long-standing literary genre in its own right, James also considers the ways in which this writing, centered as it is on moments of national crisis, complicated debates about black identity and African Americans' claims to citizenship. In a provocative assessment, James argues that the very ambivalence over the use of violence as a political instrument defines African American war writing and creates a compelling, contradictory body of literature that defies easy summary.
JENNIFER C. JAMES is assistant professor of English and Africana studies at George Washington University.
Contents Acknowledgments Introduction. Sable Hands and National Arms: Theorizing the African American Literature of War 1. Civil War Wounds: William Wells Brown, Violence, and the Domestic Narrative 2. Fighting Fire with Fire: Frances Harper, Paul Laurence Dunbar, and the Post-Civil War Reconciliation Narrative 3. Not Men Alone: Susie King Taylor's Reminiscences of My Life in Camp and Masculine Self-Fashioning 4. Imagining Mobility: Turn-of-the-Century Empire, Technology, and Black Imperial Citizenship 5. Innocence, Complicity, Consent: Black Men, White Women, and Worlds of Wars 6. Diaspora and Dissent: World War I, Claude McKay, and Home to Harlem 7. If We Come Out Standing Up: Gwendolyn Brooks, World War II, and the Politics of Rehabilitation Conclusion. Let This Dying Be for Something: And Then We Heard the Thunder and the Military Neoslave Narrative Notes Index
That James has mastered the literature and history of the period is beyond question.--The Register of the Kentucky Historical Society James walks us through a body of literature never previously gathered under a similar rubric. . . [She] map[s] out a genuinely new cognitive field that other scholars can now contest and hone.--Journal of American History "[A] pioneering view of African American war literature. . . . Essential.--CHOICE
The text is both easily accessible and cutting-edge in its scholarship and will be of interest to scholars in black Atlantic/African diaspora studies, African American studies, women's studies, sociology, queer studies, and literature. --Michelle Wright, University of Minnesota, author of Becoming Black: Creating Identity in the African Diaspora
"A fascinating book. James's comparative study of a broad range of war literature by African American authors is sophisticated and consistently provocative. She grounds the theoretical scaffolding of her study with closely observed textual details."--James Smethurst, University of Massachusetts-Amherst, author of The Black Arts Movement: Literary Nationalism in the 1960s and 1970s