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Cover of Signs and cities

Signs and cities

Black literary postmodernism

By Madhu Dubey

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Publish Date

2003

Publisher

University of Chicago Press

Language

eng

Pages

284

Description:

"Signs and Cities is the first book to consider what it means to speak of a postmodern moment in African American literature. Dubey argues that for African American studies, postmodernity best names a period, beginning in the early 1970s, marked by acute disenchantment with the promises of urban modernity and of print literacy." "Dubey shows how black novelists from the last three decades have reconsidered the modern urban legacy and thus articulated a distinctly African American strain of postmodernism. She argues that novelists such as Octavia Butler, Samuel Delany, Toni Morrison, Gloria Naylor, Ishmael Reed, Sapphire, and John Edgar Wideman probe the disillusionment of urban modernity through repeated, almost obsessive recourse to tropes of the book and scenes of reading and writing. Although the outpouring of fiction by African Americans since the 1970s has been hailed as a flowering of black literature, Dubey demonstrates that these writers view the book with profound ambivalence, construing it as an urban medium that cannot recapture the face-to-face communities assumed by oral and folk forms of expression." "A definitive portrait of contemporary black fiction, Signs and Cities will be valuable to students of American literature, African American studies, and postmodern theory."--Jacket.