After the Pain: Critical Essays on Gayl Jones

After the Pain: Critical Essays on Gayl Jones

After the Pain: Critical Essays on Gayl Jones

After the Pain: Critical Essays on Gayl Jones

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Overview

As a poet, playwright, novelist, short-story writer, and critic, Gayl Jones has always resisted labels in her quest to find a liberating voice for black women and herself. With a poet’s lyricism and a musician’s ear for rhythm, she continually seeks new ways to confront the barriers, traumas, insecurities, and prejudices oppressing black women, and, by extension, all women. After the Pain: Critical Essays on Gayl Jones is the first comprehensive collection of essays dedicated solely to the exploration of Jones’s work. Ranging from analyses of her use of language and music to reevaluations of her representation of sexuality and gender roles to examinations of the oft-overlooked connections between Latin America and African Americans, each of these essays investigates Jones’s desire to continually complicate the process of identity formation.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780820478388
Publisher: Peter Lang Inc., International Academic Publishers
Publication date: 06/09/2006
Series: African-American Literature and Culture: Expanding and Exploding the Boundaries , #8
Pages: 268
Product dimensions: 6.30(w) x 9.06(h) x (d)

About the Author

The Editor: Fiona Mills is Assistant Professor of English and Women’s Studies at Curry College. She received her Ph.D. in African American literature and Latino/a literature and theory from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She has written several essays in the areas of African American literature, Latino/a literature, Women’s studies, and film criticism. She is currently revising a monograph on Afro-Latino/a literature.

Table of Contents

Contents: Trudier Harris: Foreword – Fiona Mills/Keith B. Mitchell: After the Pain: An Introduction – Heather E. Epes: Identity and Conceptual Limitation in Gayl Jones’s The Healing: From Turtle to Human Being – Shubha Venugopal: Textual Transfigurations and Female Metamorphosis: Reading Gayl Jones’s The Healing – L.H. Stallings: From Mules to Turtle and Unicorn Women: The Gender-Folk Revolution and the Legacy of the Obeah in Gayl Jones’s The Healing – Fiona Mills: Telling the Untold Tale: Afro-Latino/a Identifications in the Work of Gayl Jones – Jill Terry: «reads kinda like jazz in they rhythm»: Gayl Jones’s Recent Jazz Conversations – Sarika Chandra: Interruptions: Tradition, Borders, and Narrative in Gayl Jones’s Mosquito – Keith B. Mitchell: «Trouble in Mind»: (Re)visioning Myth, Sexuality and Race in Gal Jones’s Corregidora – Megan Sweeney: Prison Narratives, Narrative Prisons: Incarcerated Women Reading Gayl Jones’s Eva’s Man – Thomas Fahy: Unsilencing Lesbianism in the Early Fiction of Gayl Jones – Howard Rambsy II: Things Deserving Echoes: Gayl Jones’s Liberating Poetry – Lovalerie King: Resistance, Reappropriation, and Reconciliation: The Blues and Flying Africans in Gayl Jones’s Song for Anninho – Keith Byerman: Afterword. Voicing Gayl Jones.
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