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Book, Private Lives, Proper Relations cover

Private Lives, Proper Relations
Regulating Black Intimacy

Jenkins, Candice M.
Paperback
$22.50 + $1.99 USPS S/H
$1.13 of your order (5%) will be donated to the school of your choice.

BOOK SUMMARY
Private Lives, Proper Relations begins with the question of why contemporary African American literature—particularly that produced by black women—is continually concerned with issues of respectability and propriety. Candice M. Jenkins argues

BOOK SYNOPSIS
Private Lives, Proper Relations begins with the question of why contemporary African American literature—particularly that produced by black women—is continually concerned with issues of respectability and propriety. Candice M. Jenkins argues that this preoccupation has its origins in recurrent ideologies about African American sexuality, and that it expresses a fundamental aspect of the racial self—an often unarticulated link between the intimate and the political in black culture.

 

In a counterpoint to her paradigmatic reading of Nella Larsen’s Passing, Jenkins’s analysis of black women’s narratives—including Ann Petry’s The Street, Toni Morrison’s Sula and Paradise, Alice Walker’s The Color Purple, and Gayl Jones’s Eva’s Man—offers a theory of black subjectivity. Here Jenkins describes middle-class attempts to rescue the black community from accusations of sexual and domestic deviance by embracing bourgeois respectability, and asserts that behind those efforts there is the “doubled vulnerability” of the black intimate subject. Rather than reflecting a DuBoisian tension between race and nation, to Jenkins this vulnerability signifies for the African American an opposition between two poles of potential exposure: racial scrutiny and the proximity of human intimacy. 

 

Scholars of African American culture acknowledge that intimacy and sexuality are taboo subjects among African Americans precisely because black intimate character has been pathologized. Private Lives, Proper Relations is a powerful contribution to the crucial effort to end the distortion still surrounding black intimacy in the United States.

 

Candice M. Jenkins is associate professor of English at Hunter College, City University o


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FOR RELATED BOOKS
Social Science Books :: Ethnic Studies Books :: African-American Studies Books
Social Science Books :: Ethnic Studies Books :: African American Studies Books

MORE BOOK INFO
ISBN: 0816647887
ISBN(13-digit): 9780816647880
Dewey Decimal: 810.9/896073
Library of Congress: 2007004540
Book Publisher: Univ of Minnesota Pr
Language: ENG
No. of Pages: 250



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