Available Formats
Transcendence and the Africana Literary Enterprise
By (Author) Christel N. Temple
Foreword by Molefi Kete Asante
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
22nd November 2017
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
809.896
Hardback
244
Width 160mm, Height 237mm, Spine 22mm
485g
Africana literary critic and cultural theory scholar, Christel N. Temple, whose groundbreaking books, Literary Pan-Africanism: History, Contexts, and Criticism (2005) and Literary Spaces: Introduction to Comparative Black Literature (2007), have been some of the most influential models of contemporary Africana Studies-based literary criticism, responds to the demand for a core disciplinary source that comprehensively defines and models literary praxis from the vantage point of Africana Studies. This highly anticipated seminal study finally institutionalizes the disciplines literary enterprise. Framing the concept of transcendence, she covers over a dozen traditional African American works in an original and thought-provoking analysis that places canonical approaches in enlightened discourse with Africana studies reader-response priorities. This study makes traditional literature come alive in conversation with topics of masculinity, womanism, Black Lives Matter, humor, Pan-Africanism, transnationalism, worldview, the subject place of Africa, cultural mythology, hero dynamics, Black psychology, demographics, history, Black liberation theology, eulogy, cultural memory, Afro-futurism, the Kemetic principle of Maat, social justice, rap and hip hop, Diaspora, and performance. Scholars now havea focused Africana Studiestextfor bothintroductory and advanced literature coursesto capturethe power of the African American literary canon while modeling the most dynamic practical applications of humanities-to-social science practices.
In Transcendence and the Africana Literary Enterprise, Temples critical approach models the freedom of vision and engagement that I seek when embracing an expansive African aestheticism and my best pedagogy. It is a major achievement. -- Joanne V. Gabbin, James Madison University
Temple centers Africology as a cultural lens. By doing so, she expands and reshapes literary criticism. In essence, this intervention into literary criticism can operate as a companion to existing and emerging African American anthologies. Transcendence is a paradigm shift that certainly incorporates previous works of literary criticism, but provides a new Afrocentric framework for learning and teaching Black culture. Her contribution repositions our notion of text and reader by connecting historical readings to contemporary literature. She traces a Black cultural evolution from 19th century novels, through contemporary fiction and theatre, to Afro-futurism and hip hop thereby offering a rich continuum of Black writing and creative impulses. Her choices for each chapter combine new approaches to well-known pieces and innovative assessments of lesser-known but critical texts. Beyond taking a deconstructive stance, Temple focuses on Black freedom. Liberation permeates her prose, creating a fresh, constructive journey for her readers. Indeed, the entire text offers a critical benchmark, one of her goals clearly reached. -- Stephanie Y. Evans, Clark Atlanta University
Transcendence and the Africana Literary Enterprisewhere Black studies, Pan-African studies, and Africology meet Africana literary criticism and reader response criticismis a brilliant coming together of theory and literary analysis that provides a new and much-needed approach to reading literary texts. -- Georgene Bess Montgomery, Clark Atlanta University
Christel N. Temple is associate professor and chair of Africana studies at the University of Pittsburgh.