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American Anatomies: Theorizing Race and Gender
Contributor(s): Wiegman, Robyn (Author)
ISBN: 0822315769     ISBN-13: 9780822315766
Publisher: Duke University Press
OUR PRICE:   $97.80  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: April 1995
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Annotation: "Ignore this book at your peril! Robyn Wiegman challenges us to re-examine our most cherished platitudes about race-and-gender, including the kind of identity politics that not only leave out African American women but also reinscribe a pernicious politics of "separate but equal" through the celebration of difference. This as a stunning account of racial/gender infusions and confusions in nineteenth- and twentieth-century U.S. culture. Controversial, brilliant, provocative."--Cathy Davidson, Duke University

"Wiegman goes well beyond current discussions in working out the theoretical challenges and cultural logics of rethinking difference within the postmodern condition, and she correctly pinpoints the overlap of race and gender within feminist theory as a decisive zone of critical articulation between postmodernism and oppositional politics."--Steven Mailloux, University of California, Irvine

Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Social Science | Anthropology - Cultural & Social
- Social Science | Gender Studies
Dewey: 305.800
LCCN: 94036882
Lexile Measure: 1810
Series: New Americanists
Physical Information: 1.05" H x 6.42" W x 9.62" (1.47 lbs) 280 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
In this brilliantly combative study, Robyn Wiegman challenges contemporary clich s about race and gender, a formulation that is itself a clich in need of questioning. As part of what she calls her "feminist disloyalty," she turns a critical, even skeptical, eye on current debates about multiculturalism and "difference" while simultaneously exposing the many ways in which white racial supremacy has been reconfigured since the institutional demise of segregation. Most of all, she examines the hypocrisy and contradictoriness of over a century of narratives that posit Anglo-Americans as heroic agents of racism's decline. Whether assessing Uncle Tom's Cabin, lynching, Leslie Fiedler's racialist mapping of the American novel, the Black Power movement of the 60s, 80s buddy films, or the novels of Richard Wright and Toni Morrison, Wiegman unflinchingly confronts the paradoxes of both racism and antiracist agendas, including those advanced from a feminist perspective.
American Anatomies takes the long view: What epistemological frameworks allowed the West, from the Renaissance forward, to schematize racial and gender differences and to create social hierarchies based on these differences? How have those epistemological regimes changed--and not changed--over time? Where are we now? With painstaking care, political passion, and intellectual daring, Wiegman analyzes the biological and cultural bases of racial and gender bias in order to reinvigorate the discussion of identity politics. She concludes that, for very different reasons, identity proves to be dangerous to minority and majority alike.