Available Formats
Alchemies of Blood and Afro-Diasporic Fiction: Race, Kinship, and the Passion for Ontology
By (Author) Prof Nicole Simek
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic USA
14th December 2023
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Literary studies: postcolonial literature
809.896073
Hardback
224
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
Alchemies of Blood and Afro-Diasporic Fiction focuses on the resurgence of biological racism in 21st-century public discourse, the ontological and material turns in the academy that have occurred over the same time period, and how Afro-diasporic fiction has responded to both with alternative visions of bloodlines, kinship, and community. In thinking through conceptions of race, ethnicity, and materiality at work within both humanities research and popular culture, Nicole Simek asks how the figure of alchemy that semi-scientific, semi-mystical search for gold and the elixir of long life can help scholars address the epistemological and affective investments in blood, bloodlines, and genetics marking both academic and mainstream discourses. To answer this question, Simek examines neo-plantation and Afrofuturist narratives, Afro-Pessimist interventions, museums and public memory projects, and direct-to-consumer genetic testing services and bioethics laws in the French Caribbean and the United States. This comparative approach to cultural production helps pinpoint and better understand the intersections and divergences between scholarship trends and troubling features of a broader Zeitgeist.
Nicole Simek is Cushing Eells Professor of Philosophy and Literature and Professor of French and Interdisciplinary Studies at Whitman College, USA. She is co-editor of Francophone Literature as World Literature (Bloomsbury, 2020) and author of two books, including Hunger and Irony in the French Caribbean: Literature and Theory in Public Life (2016).