CONTINUITY OF AFROCENTRIC TROPES ABOUT AFRICAN AMERICAN IDENTITY FORMATION IN THE NOVELS BY PAULE MARSHALL AND GLORIA NAYLOR Cover Image

SUKCESIVNOST AFROCENTRIČNIH TROPA O STVARANJU AFROAMERIČKOG IDENTITETA U ROMANIMA POLE MARŠAL I GLORIJE NEJLOR
CONTINUITY OF AFROCENTRIC TROPES ABOUT AFRICAN AMERICAN IDENTITY FORMATION IN THE NOVELS BY PAULE MARSHALL AND GLORIA NAYLOR

Author(s): Sandra V. Novkinić
Subject(s): History, Language and Literature Studies, Comparative Study of Literature, American Literature
Published by: Filološki fakultet, Nikšić
Keywords: continuity; afrocentric tropes; African American identity; personal; collective

Summary/Abstract: African American literature that is fundamentally a socially symbolic linguistic construct, seeks different ways to expand and continue the use of Afrocentric vernacular tropes of personal and collective identity formation. The five residual oral forms – oratory (including everyday speech acts), myth/ritual performance, legend, tale, and song – as well as satire, irony, and paradox are used by contemporary African American novelists. This paper points to how the legendary black ancestors and elder members of the community, the gifted and often rebellious orator, musician, artist, the spiritual leader, and the messianic figure are equally enduring symbols and tropes. The aim of this work is to show the way in which the contemporary African American novelists Paule Marshall and Gloria Naylor use these (above mentioned) characters and symbols to reconstruct their long struggle as individuals and as community against anti-black racism. Therefore, the focus of this paper is on continuity of Afrocentric tropes in African American personal/collective and female/male identity formation as represented in selected novels by Paule Marshall and Gloria Naylor.

  • Issue Year: 2020
  • Issue No: 32
  • Page Range: 27-42
  • Page Count: 16
  • Language: Bosnian