布鲁克斯·海夫纳的《黑纸浆:吉姆·克劳阴影下的类型小说》(评论)

Pub Date : 2022-08-10 DOI:10.1093/jsh/shac045
Benoît Tadié
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引用次数: 0

摘要

布鲁克斯·海夫纳的开创性著作探讨了20世纪20年代至50年代由非裔美国人撰写、为非裔美国人创作以及关于非裔美国人的流行小说。从另一个角度来看,这也是关于黑人工人阶级和中产阶级在那段时期阅读的内容,以及他们的阅读如何为“当前矛盾提供乌托邦式的解决方案”(140),特别是在面对猖獗的吉姆·克劳种族主义时。在这些主题上,它提供了引人入胜的新见解,邀请读者修改他们对流行小说的假设,并重新思考美国文化中种族和流派之间令人担忧的关系。《黑纸浆》源于海夫纳敏锐的意识,即将黑人的生命排除在以白人为主的纸浆杂志之外,当时这些杂志阐述了各种类型的小说,从浪漫和冷酷的侦探小说到幻想、怪异的威胁、科幻、西部和英雄小说。尽管有数量不详的黑人作家为讲坛撰稿,但杂志并没有认定他们是黑人,他们不得不在故事中与白人人物打交道。因此,“在讲坛上阅读的黑人读者[…]被困在一个将白人视为高于一切的流派体系中”(5-6),并经常受到种族主义偏见的支持。但是,正如海夫纳所展示的那样,一种反黑人、非裔美国人的类型小说是在《匹兹堡信使报》和《巴尔的摩非裔美国人报》等报纸的“另类纸浆空间”(46)中发展起来的,这些报纸是美国所有黑人报纸中发行量最大的。从20世纪20年代到50年代初(这一时期恰逢讲坛的鼎盛时期和衰落时期),这两份出版物出版了2500多篇非裔美国人作家的故事和连载文章,以非裔美国人的事迹为特色。在《黑纸浆》中,海夫纳复活了这一庞大的小说群体,迄今为止,文学历史学家莫名其妙地、毫无道理地忽视了这一群体,尽管它在黑人社区中的读者人数比现在被称为经典非裔美国人小说的读者人数多得多。他重新审视了小亨利·路易斯·盖茨的“能指(g)”概念和斯图尔特·霍尔的文化表达理论,将黑人类型小说纳入了“二十世纪初相互竞争的文学体系”(13),证明它不是在真空中发展起来的,而是始终以双重表述为特征:虽然它废除了白人纸浆的通用公式,并“为种族正义服务”(7),但它也为黑人读者提供了乌托邦式的“连载的乐趣”
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Black Pulp: Genre Fiction in the Shadow of Jim Crow by Brooks Hefner (review)
Brooks Hefner’s pioneering book deals with popular fiction written by, for, and about African American people between the 1920s and the 1950s. Seen from another angle, it is also about what the Black workingand middle class were reading during that period and how their reading may have offered “utopian solutions to the contradictions of the present” (140), particularly in the face of rampant Jim Crow racism. On these subjects, it delivers fascinating new insights, inviting readers to revise their assumptions about popular fiction and to rethink the fraught relationship between race and genre in American culture. Black Pulp grows out of Hefner’s acute consciousness of the exclusion of Black lives from the predominantly white pulp magazines, at a time when a variety of genres, from romance and hard-boiled detective fiction to fantasy, weird menace, SF, western and hero fiction, were elaborated in and by these periodicals. Although an unknown number of Black writers did write for the pulps, they were not identified as such by the magazines and had to deal with white characters in their stories. As a consequence, Black readers “who were reading the pulps were [. . .] trapped in a genre system that valorized whiteness above all else” (5-6) and was often underpinned by racist prejudice. But, as Hefner shows, a counter, African American, genre fiction developed in the “alternative pulp space” (46) of newspapers like the Pittsburgh Courier and Baltimore Afro-American, which had the largest circulation of all Black newspapers in the country. From the 1920s to the early 1950s (a period which coincides with the pulps’ heyday and decline), these two publications published over 2,500 stories and serial installments written by African American authors, featuring the exploits of African American characters. In Black Pulp, Hefner resurrects this vast body of fiction, which has so far been inexplicably and unjustifiably ignored by literary historians, although its readership was much greater among the Black community than that of what is now known as canonical African American fiction. Revisiting Henry Louis Gates Jr.’s concept of “signifiyin(g)” and Stuart Hall’s theory of cultural articulation, he inscribes Black genre fiction within “the competing literary systems of the early twentieth century” (13), demonstrating that it did not develop in a vacuum but was always characterized by a double articulation: while it dismantled the white pulp generic formulas and reconfigured them “in the service of racial justice” (7), it also offered Black readers the utopian “pleasures of seriality
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