Black People’s Unemployment and Urban Violence in John E. Wideman’s Narratives
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Abstract
Abstract
This article offers a reading of the fiction of the AfricanAmerican novelist John Edgar Wideman that goes against
the grain of the popular cliché of the propensity among
Blacks in the United States to laziness, and therefore to
work refusal, and to the violence that is consubstantial to
large urban pockets hit by mass unemployment. It draws
its examples from a corpus made up of the Homewood
Trilogy, A Glance Away, Philadelphia Fire, and Reuben,
around which it articulates its reflection, demonstrating
that African Americans are victims of a historical and
social context of discrimination against which they must,
however, fight for their development. The Marxist literary
approach and the Critical Race Theory have been used as
the theoretical framework for the study.
Résumé
Le présent article offre de la fiction du romancier AfroAméricain John Edgar Wideman une lecture qui s’oppose
au cliché populaire de la propension chez les Noirs aux
Etats-Unis à la paresse, donc au refus de travailler, et à la
violence consubstantielle aux grandes poches urbaines
frappées par le chômage de masse. Il tire ses exemple d’un
corpus composé du Homewood Trilogy, A Glance Away,
Philadelphia Fire, et Reuben, autour duquel il articule sa
réflexion afin de démontrer que les Afro-Americains sont
victimes d’un contexte historique et social de
discrimination contre lequel ils doivent cependant lutter
pour leur épanouissement. L’approche littéraire marxiste
et le Critical Race Theory ont servi de cadre théorique à l’étude
