Reconfiguring citizenship and national identity in the North American literary imagination [electronic resource] /Kathy-Ann Tan.
By: Tan, Kathy-Ann [author.].
Contributor(s): Project Muse.
Material type: BookSeries: Series in citizenship studies: ; UPCC book collections on Project MUSE: Publisher: Detroit : Wayne State University Press, [2015] 2015)Description: 1 online resource (x, 364 pages, 6 unnumbered pages of plates :) illustrations.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9780814341414; 0814341411.Subject(s): Citizenship in literature | Canadian literature | American literature | Canadian literature -- History and criticism | American literature -- History and criticism | Citizenship in literatureGenre/Form: Criticism, interpretation, etc. | Electronic books. DDC classification: 810.9 Online resources: Full text available:Includes bibliographical references (pages 311-337) and index.
Willful citizens. Negotiating Americanness and renarrativizing the "national symbolic" in the American Renaissance : Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter and Walt Whitman's Democratic Vistas -- Playfully political : the female citizen-in-process in Gail Scott's Heroine -- Willfulness and the Wayward citizen : Philip Roth's American Trilogy -- Precarious citizens. Precariousness and the ethics of narration : Etel Adnan's In the Heart of the Heart of Another Country and Sitt Marie Rose -- Narratives of unhoming, displacement, and reluctaion : George Eliott Clarke's Whylah Falls and the Africadian community in Nova Scotia -- Citizenship unhinged : securitization, identity management, and the migrant in Amitava Kumar's Passport Photos -- Queer citizens. Sexual citizenship and the transgressive body : Djuna Barne's Nightwood -- Queer migration and citizenship in Caribbean Canadian writing : Diionne Brand's In Another Place, Not Here and Shani Mootno's Valmiki's Daughter -- Queer(ing the) nation : ACT UP and AIDS activism in Sarah Schulman's People in Trouble and Rat Bohemia -- Diasporic and indigenous citizens. Narrating contested spaces : denizens and resident alliens of the (new) metropolis in Dionne Brand's What We All Long For and Diinaw Mengestu's The Beautiful Things That Heaven Bears -- Exile, migration, and the "poetics of relation" : Edwidge Danticat's Brother, I'm Dying and Dany Laferriere's The Return -- Citizenship deferred : Cherokee Freedmen versus Cerokee Nation in Shannon Ewel Foster's Abraham's Well and Tiya Miles's Ties That Bond The Story of an Afro-Cherokee Family in Slavery and Freedom.
Description based on print version record.
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