New Visions of Community in Contemporary American Fiction: Tan, Kingsolver, Castillo, Morrison

New Visions of Community in Contemporary American Fiction: Tan, Kingsolver, Castillo, Morrison

by Magali Cornier Michael
New Visions of Community in Contemporary American Fiction: Tan, Kingsolver, Castillo, Morrison

New Visions of Community in Contemporary American Fiction: Tan, Kingsolver, Castillo, Morrison

by Magali Cornier Michael

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Overview

In this engaging, optimistic close reading of five late twentieth-century novels by American women, Magali Cornier Michael illuminates the ways in which their authors engage with ideas of communal activism, common commitment, and social transformation. The fictions she examines imagine coalition building as a means of moving toward new forms of nonhierarchical justice; for ethnic cultures that, as a result of racist attitudes, have not been assimilated, power with each other rather than power over each other is a collective goal.Michael argues that much contemporary American fiction by women offers models of care and nurturing that move away from the private sphere toward the public and political. Specifically, texts by women from such racially marked ethnic groups as African American, Asian American, Native American, and Mexican American draw from the rich systems of thought, histories, and experiences of these hybrid cultures and thus offer feminist and ethical revisions of traditional concepts of community, coalition, subjectivity, and agency.Focusing on Amy Tan’s The Joy Luck Club, Barbara Kingsolver’s The Bean Trees and Pigs in Heaven, Ana Castillo’s So Far from God, and Toni Morrison’s Paradise, Michael shows that each writer emphasizes the positive, liberating effects of kinship and community. These hybrid versions of community, which draw from other-than-dominant culturally specific ideas and histories, have something to offer Americans as the United States moves into an increasingly diverse twenty-first century. Michael provides a rich lens through which to view both contemporary fiction and contemporary life.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781587297397
Publisher: University of Iowa Press
Publication date: 04/01/2008
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 256
File size: 576 KB

About the Author

Magali Cornier Michael is associate professor of English and co-director of the Women’s and Gender Studies Program at Duquesne University in Pittsburgh. She is the author of Feminism and the Post-modern Impulse: Post–World War II Fiction as well as articles on such authors as John Fowles, Angela Carter, D. M. Thomas, Doris Lessing, Virginia Woolf, Margaret Atwood, and Toni Morrison.

Table of Contents

Contents Acknowledgments Introduction: Rethinking Community for the Twenty-First Century Choosing Hope and Remaking Kinship: Amy Tan’s The Joy Luck Club Negotiating Collectivities: Barbara Kingsolver’s The Bean Trees and Pigs in Heaven Collective Liberation and Activism via Spirituality: Ana Castillo’s So Far from God The Call to Love, to Assert Power with Others: Toni Morrison’s Paradise Conclusion: Looking to the Future Notes Bibliography Index
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