书脸

J. Goldsby
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在整个20世纪上半叶,作者的肖像从书的扉页转移到防尘套的外皮上;与此同时,当吉姆·克劳种族隔离在美国达到压制的高度时,非裔美国人文学在主流文学市场上享有前所未有的流通。本章追溯了这种融合,以探索书的“面孔”所进行的文化工作——封面、防尘套和作者肖像。研究这些揭示了将20世纪中期非裔美国作家与18世纪和19世纪的先例区分开来的信号发展:即,从作为黑人人性佐证的写作转向作为表达黑人多元化或人格的写作。通过将另类而非真实性作为读者接触黑人文学并将其解读为艺术作品的门槛,作者肖像的迁移也起到了阅读伦理的修辞作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Book Faces
Across the first half of the twentieth century, author portraits migrated from the frontispiece inside of books to the exterior covers of dust jackets; at the same time, while Jim Crow segregation reached its repressive heights in the United States, African-American literature enjoyed unprecedented circulation in the mainstream literary marketplace. This chapter traces this convergence to explore the cultural work performed by the “face” of a book—frontispieces, dust jackets, and author portraits. Examining these lays bare the signal development that distinguishes mid-twentieth-century African-American authorship from its eighteenth- and nineteenth-century precedents: namely, the turn away from writing as corroboration of black humanity to writing as expressive of black pluralities or personae. By setting alterity, not authenticity, as the threshold where readers meet and interpret black literature as works of art, the migration of author portraits also functions as a trope for the ethics of reading.
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