Charles Chesnutt's Dilemma: Professional Ethics, Social Justice, and Domestic Feminism in The Marrow of Tradition

Unlike his earlier dialect tales, which were enthusiastically reviewed in the white press, The Marrow of Tradition, his 1901 novel known to be a fictional recreation of the Wilmington, North Carolina race riot of 1898 in which at least nineteen black men and women were murdered, received only a luke...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Southern literary journal 2008-09, Vol.41 (1), p.73-92
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description Unlike his earlier dialect tales, which were enthusiastically reviewed in the white press, The Marrow of Tradition, his 1901 novel known to be a fictional recreation of the Wilmington, North Carolina race riot of 1898 in which at least nineteen black men and women were murdered, received only a lukewarm response at its publication.1 William Dean Howells called it a "bitter, bitter" book and others commented on its lack of artistry (Pickens 49, 82). Booker T. Washington, long associated with the latter perspective, set forth a strategy that did not challenge white supremacy in, as he said in his famous Atlanta Compromise speech, "all things that are purely social," thus ostensibly providing a space for black self-help and advancement.2 Chesnutt's unease with the accomodationist program of racial uplift is laced throughout his extensive correspondence with Washington and other race leaders as well as in numerous speeches.
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source Jstor Complete Legacy
subjects African Americans
American literature
Black communities
Bone marrow
Chesnutt, Charles Waddell (1858-1932)
Children
Communities
Community
Domestic violence
Ethics
Feminism
Medical research
Murders & murder attempts
Narratives
Novels
Physicians
Professionalism
Race
Regional dialects
Social aspects
Sons
White people
White supremacy
Women
title Charles Chesnutt's Dilemma: Professional Ethics, Social Justice, and Domestic Feminism in The Marrow of Tradition
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