|
Scarring and the act of scarring are recurrent images in African
American literature. In Scarring the Black Body, Carol E.
Henderson analyzes the cultural and historical implications of
scarring in a number of African American texts that feature the
trope of the scar, including works by Sherley Anne Williams, Toni
Morrison, Ann Petry, Ralph Ellison, and Richard Wright.
The first part of Scarring the Black Body, "The Call,"
traces the process by which African bodies were Americanized
through the practice of branding. Henderson incorporates various
materials—rom advertisements for the return of runaways to
slave narratives—to examine the cultural practice of "writing"
the body. She also considers ways in which writers and social
activists, including Frederick Douglass, Olaudah Equiano, Harriet
Tubman, and Sojourner Truth, developed a "call" centered on the
body's scars to demand that people of African descent be given
equal rights and protection under the law.
In the second part of the book, "The Response," Henderson goes on
to show that more recent representations of the conditions of
slavery by authors such as Williams and Morrison extend the
efforts of their predecessors by developing creative responses to
those calls centered around the African American body and its
scars. Henderson explores Williams's reinvention of the whip-scarred body in her novel Dessa Rose and provides a close
analysis of Morrison's use of scar imagery in Beloved. She
also devotes a chapter to Petry's The Street and concludes
with an investigation of the wounded black male psyche in the
works of Ralph Ellison and Richard Wright.
Scarring the Black Body demonstrates that the creative
acts of these authors bind together that which has been wounded
both literally and figuratively. Those who hear the voices of the
ancestors are urged to connect to that part of themselves wherein
wounds of the past carry a self-knowledge that can alter the
experiences of the present. In this way, the disfigured body as a
cultural metaphor and social invention can come to terms with its
own humanity and embodiment.
About the Author
Carol E. Henderson is Associate Professor of English at the
University of Delaware in Newark.
Home
Complete Catalog
Order Information
Search
|