Race and Respectability in an Early Black Atlantic

Cassander L Smith author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Louisiana State University Press

Published:25th Oct '23

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Race and Respectability in an Early Black Atlantic cover

Race and Respectability in an Early Black Atlantic examines the means through which people of African descent embodied tenets of respectability as a coping strategy to navigate enslavement and racial oppression in the early Black Atlantic world. The term "respectability politics" refers to the way members of a minoritized population adopt the customs and manners of a dominant culture in order to gain visibility and combat negative stereotypes about their subject group. Today respectability politics can be seen in how those within and outside Black communities police the behavior of Black celebrities, critique protest movements, and celebrate accomplishments by people of African descent who break racial barriers.

To study the origins of the complicated relationship between race and respectability, Cassander L. Smith shows that early American literatures reveal Black communities engaging with issues of respectability from the very beginning of the transatlantic slave trade. Concerns about character and comportment influenced the literary production of Black Atlantic communities, particularly in the long eighteenth century. Uncovering the central importance of respectability as a theme shaping the literary development of cultures throughout the early Black Atlantic, Smith illuminates the mechanics of respectability politics in a range of texts, including poetry, letters, and life writing by Phillis Wheatley, Olaudah Equiano, and expatriates on the west coast of Africa in Sierra Leone.

Through these early Black texts, Race and Respectability in an Early Black Atlantic considers respectability politics as a malleable strategy that has both energized and suppressed Black cultures for centuries.

This is the book that students and teachers have been waiting for, a book that will enable lay readers and experts alike to draw a clearer and more nuanced throughline from the arrival of enslaved Africans in 1619 to the state-sanctioned killings of Black Americans in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries." - Zachary McLeod Hutchins, author of Before Equiano: A Prehistory of the North American Slave Narrative

ISBN: 9780807179796

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 272g

240 pages