Down Home and Uptown: The Representation of Black Speech in American FictionFairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1984 - 216 páginas Holton's thesis is that regardless of its categorization by linguists as a dialect or creole language, the speech of black Americans is distinctive and is an emergent literary language. She reviews the efforts to define the nature and historical origins of black English and its linguistic features and describes how the shaping of a convention for representing black speech was followed by a reaction demanding a realistic representation of the speech of black Americans. This reaction was central to the formation of a black literary aesthetic in the postmodern period, and its development is illustrated by the writings of Harriet Beecher Stowe, Langston Hughes, Mark Twain, William Faulkner, Toni Morrison. She also examines the varieties of narrative method available to American fiction writers with the black and standard English at their disposal, as well as the relationship between black fictional characters and the narrators. |
Dentro del libro
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Página 12
... awareness of black characters and their consciousness . The fifth chapter , which deals with the last forty years in American Black English dialect fiction , considers the results of those early explorations in method . Here I describe ...
... awareness of black characters and their consciousness . The fifth chapter , which deals with the last forty years in American Black English dialect fiction , considers the results of those early explorations in method . Here I describe ...
Página 182
... awareness of his own role as the negotiator of two systems of reality , that apprehended and uttered by the black consciousness and that apprehended and uttered by the white . The two consciousnesses do not converge , and Reed's ironic ...
... awareness of his own role as the negotiator of two systems of reality , that apprehended and uttered by the black consciousness and that apprehended and uttered by the white . The two consciousnesses do not converge , and Reed's ironic ...
Página 203
... awareness of its own development , an incredible freshness . Its potential extends to the manipulation of literary irony , the exploration of relationships between nar- rators and speakers , authors and readers , and as a metaphor in ...
... awareness of its own development , an incredible freshness . Its potential extends to the manipulation of literary irony , the exploration of relationships between nar- rators and speakers , authors and readers , and as a metaphor in ...
Contenido
Preface | 9 |
Linguists and Speakers Today | 34 |
The Identification of | 55 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Down Home and Uptown: The Representation of Black Speech in American Fiction Sylvia Holton Peterson Vista de fragmentos - 1984 |
Términos y frases comunes
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