The Plagiarist's Craft: Fugitivity and Theatricality in "Running a Thousand Miles for Freedom"

After showing that nine percent of William Craft's Running a Thousand Miles for Freedom is plagiarized in ways that strongly resemble the ways in which William Wells Brown typically plagiarized, I argue that Brown wrote the narrative in tandem with Craft. Recognizing that possibility encourages...

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Veröffentlicht in:PMLA : Publications of the Modern Language Association of America 2013-10, Vol.128 (4), p.907-922
1. Verfasser: SANBORN, GEOFFREY
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description After showing that nine percent of William Craft's Running a Thousand Miles for Freedom is plagiarized in ways that strongly resemble the ways in which William Wells Brown typically plagiarized, I argue that Brown wrote the narrative in tandem with Craft. Recognizing that possibility encourages us to pay closer attention to the formal aspects of Running, whose abrupt tonal shifts and frequent comic digressions make it one of the most peculiar of the major African American slave narratives. Just as Running prolongs, to an extraordinary degree, the intermediate condition of its fugitive protagonists, so does it hold open, by means of its highly theatrical interludes, the prospect of another future, another stage on which black and white Americans might encounter one another.
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; Cambridge University Press Journals Complete
subjects Abolitionism
African American literature
African Americans
American literature
Craft, William
Discourse analysis
Literary criticism
Literary history
Narratives
Plagiarism
Running
Slave narratives
Slavery
Theater
Writers
title The Plagiarist's Craft: Fugitivity and Theatricality in "Running a Thousand Miles for Freedom"
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