Contending Forces. Illustrated

Contending Forces. Illustrated
Author: Pauline E. Hopkins
Publisher: Strelbytskyy Multimedia Publishing
Total Pages: 275
Release: 2023-01-05
Genre: Fiction
ISBN:

A Romance Illustrative of Negro Life North and South is the first major novel by Pauline Hopkins, first published in 1900. Contending Forces focuses on African American families in post-Civil War American society.

Contending Forces

Contending Forces
Author: Pauline Elizabeth Hopkins
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 468
Release: 1988
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9780195052589

Hopkins tells her share of horror stories: a white man who would free his slaves is summarily shot, his wife bound to a post and whipped; black field hands serve sadistic bosses; even two generations later, black women are ravished and black men lynched, usually for a supposed rape. Hopkins's discussionof lynching and rape is one of the sanest, most fascinating in literature.

Contending Forces

Contending Forces
Author: Pauline Elizabeth Hopkins
Publisher:
Total Pages: 424
Release: 1900
Genre: African American women
ISBN:

Identifying Marks

Identifying Marks
Author: Jennifer Putzi
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Total Pages: 209
Release: 2012-06-01
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0820343951

What we know of the marked body in nineteenth-century American literature and culture often begins with The Scarlet Letter's Hester Prynne and ends with Moby Dick's Queequeg. This study looks at the presence of marked men and women in a more challenging array of canonical and lesser-known works, including exploration narratives, romances, and frontier novels. Jennifer Putzi shows how tattoos, scars, and brands can function both as stigma and as emblem of healing and survival, thus blurring the borderline between the biological and social, the corporeal and spiritual. Examining such texts as Typee, Uncle Tom's Cabin, Captivity of the Oatman Girls, The Morgesons, Iola Leroy, and Contending Forces, Putzi relates the representation of the marked body to significant events, beliefs, or cultural shifts, including tattooing and captivity, romantic love, the patriarchal family, and abolition and slavery. Her particular focus is on both men and women of color, as well as white women-in other words, bodies that did not signify personhood in the nineteenth century and thus by their very nature were grotesque. Complicating the discourse on agency, power, and identity, these texts reveal a surprisingly complex array of representations of and responses to the marked body--some that are a product of essentialist thinking about race and gender identities and some that complicate, critique, or even rebel against conventional thought.