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Reconstructing Revenge: Race and Justice after the Civil War

    1. [1] Carnegie Mellon University

      Carnegie Mellon University

      City of Pittsburgh, Estados Unidos

  • Localización: American literature: A journal of literary history, criticism and bibliography, ISSN 0002-9831, Vol. 91, Nº 4, 2019, págs. 751-781
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • This essay reconsiders the politics of African American literature after the Civil War by focusing on revenge as a response to the wrong of slavery. Though forgiveness dominates literary and historical scholarship, I assemble an archive of real and imagined instances of vengeance in black-authored texts from the period following formal emancipation to the dawn of the twentieth century: the petitions of the freedmen of Edisto Island, South Carolina; the minutes of the 1865 Virginia State Convention of Colored People; the narrative of the ex-slave Samuel Hall; and the Colored American Magazine’s coverage of the lynching of Louis Wright. Reading these works alongside Pauline E. Hopkins’s Winona (1902), I show how her novel develops a philosophy of righteous revenge that reclaims the true meaning of justice in a democracy. Ultimately, this archive can help us not only to examine anew a neglected literary period but also to reimagine racial justice, then and now.


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