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Liminal whiteness in early US fiction

Part of the Interventions in Nineteenth-Century American Literature and Culture series
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Hannah Lauren Murrayshows that early US authors repeatedly imagined lost, challenged and negated White racial identity in the new nation. In a Critical Whiteness reading of canonical and lesser-known texts from Charles Brockden Brown to Frank J. Webb, Murray argues that White characters on the border between life and death were liminal presences that disturbed prescriptions of racial belonging in the early US. Fears of losing Whiteness were routinely channelled through the language of liminality, in a precursor to today's White anxieties of marginalisation and minoritisation.

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Product Details
Edinburgh University Press
1474481760 / 9781474481762
eBook (EPUB)
10/05/2021
English
216 pages
Copy: 20%; print: 20%
Published in Scotland. Description based on CIP data; resource not viewed.