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Class Interruptions - by Robin Brooks (Paperback)

Class Interruptions - by  Robin Brooks (Paperback) - 1 of 1
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About this item

Highlights

  • As downward mobility continues to be an international issue, Robin Brooks offers a timely intervention between the humanities and social sciences by examining how Black women's cultural production engages debates about the growth in income and wealth gaps in global society during the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries.
  • Author(s): Robin Brooks
  • 238 Pages
  • Literary Criticism, American

Description



About the Book



"As downward mobility continues to be an international issue, Robin Brooks makes a timely intervention between the humanities and social sciences by examining how Black women's cultural production engages debates about the growth in income and wealth gaps in global society during the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. Using an interdisciplinary approach, this innovative book employs major contemporary texts by both African American and Caribbean writers--Toni Morrison, Gloria Naylor, Dawn Turner, Olive Senior, Oonya Kempadoo, Merle Hodge, and Diana McCaulay--to demonstrate how neoliberalism, within the broader framework of racial capitalism, reframes structural inequalities as personal failures, thus obscuring how to improve unjust conditions. Through interviews with authors, textual analyses of the fiction, and a diagramming of cross-class relationships, Brooks offers compelling new insight on literary portrayals of class inequalities and division. She reconceptualizes the scope of the Black women's literary tradition since the 1970s by repositioning the importance of class, and she explores why the imagination matters as we think about novel ways to address long-standing and simultaneously evolving inequities"--



Book Synopsis



As downward mobility continues to be an international issue, Robin Brooks offers a timely intervention between the humanities and social sciences by examining how Black women's cultural production engages debates about the growth in income and wealth gaps in global society during the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. Using an interdisciplinary approach, this innovative book employs major contemporary texts by both African American and Caribbean writers--Toni Morrison, Gloria Naylor, Dawn Turner, Olive Senior, Oonya Kempadoo, Merle Hodge, and Diana McCaulay--to demonstrate how neoliberalism, within the broader framework of racial capitalism, reframes structural inequalities as personal failures, thus obscuring how to improve unjust conditions.

Through interviews with authors, textual analyses of the fiction, and a diagramming of cross-class relationships, Brooks offers compelling new insight on literary portrayals of class inequalities and division. She expands the scope of how the Black women's literary tradition, since the 1970s, has been conceptualized by repositioning the importance of class and explores why the imagination matters as we think about novel ways to address long-standing and simultaneously evolving issues.



Review Quotes




"In a striking way, Brooks points to the significance of the imagination to understanding the ongoing effects of slavery, specifically the imagination's importance to cognition, not only the faculty of reason--to discern a world hinged upon the transhistorical replication of slavery's plantation structures."--American Literary History

"A well-organized and well-argued text. . . . Readers from a range of disciplines . . . will be made aware of both the problems associated with strongly held biases regarding class, and the way literature provides a mechanism to help us make the societal differences we claim to be invested in."--New West Indian Guide

"In this innovative work, Dr. Robin Brooks examines narratives of class divisions and economic inequality in the literature of Black women including Toni Morrison, Gloria Naylor, and more."--Ms. Magazine

"This book has vision, ambition, and insight. . . . The work of forging such alliances, as Brooks writes, is not easy, but Class Interruptions makes a powerful case for the mind shifts that can lead to them, by making an intersectional and interdisciplinary demonstration of why they are necessary."--Journal of Working-Class Studies
Dimensions (Overall): 9.21 Inches (H) x 6.14 Inches (W) x .54 Inches (D)
Weight: .82 Pounds
Suggested Age: 22 Years and Up
Number of Pages: 238
Genre: Literary Criticism
Sub-Genre: American
Publisher: University of North Carolina Press
Theme: African American
Format: Paperback
Author: Robin Brooks
Language: English
Street Date: February 1, 2022
TCIN: 92317707
UPC: 9781469666471
Item Number (DPCI): 247-31-7894
Origin: Made in the USA or Imported
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Shipping details

Estimated ship dimensions: 0.54 inches length x 6.14 inches width x 9.21 inches height
Estimated ship weight: 0.82 pounds
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