فهرست مطالب
Contents......Page 12
INTRODUCTION: On Literary Records and Discursive Possibilities......Page 16
ONE: Re-Membering Blackness After Reconstruction: Race, Rape, and Political Desire in the Work of Thomas Dixon, Jr.......Page 32
TWO: Mark Twain, Charles Chesnutt, and the Politics of Literary Anti-Racism......Page 61
THREE: Black Women and White Terrorism: Ida B. Wells, David Bryant Fulton, Pauline E. Hopkins, and the Politics of Representation......Page 90
FOUR: Rethinking White Female Silences: Kate Chopin's Local Color Fiction and the Politics of White Supremacy......Page 121
AFTERWORD: Cultural Memories and Critical Inventions......Page 149
Notes......Page 162
Bibliography......Page 190
B......Page 203
D......Page 204
I......Page 205
N......Page 206
T......Page 207
Y......Page 208
INTRODUCTION: On Literary Records and Discursive Possibilities......Page 16
ONE: Re-Membering Blackness After Reconstruction: Race, Rape, and Political Desire in the Work of Thomas Dixon, Jr.......Page 32
TWO: Mark Twain, Charles Chesnutt, and the Politics of Literary Anti-Racism......Page 61
THREE: Black Women and White Terrorism: Ida B. Wells, David Bryant Fulton, Pauline E. Hopkins, and the Politics of Representation......Page 90
FOUR: Rethinking White Female Silences: Kate Chopin's Local Color Fiction and the Politics of White Supremacy......Page 121
AFTERWORD: Cultural Memories and Critical Inventions......Page 149
Notes......Page 162
Bibliography......Page 190
B......Page 203
D......Page 204
I......Page 205
N......Page 206
T......Page 207
Y......Page 208