Hitting a straight lick with a crooked stick
by Susan Edwards Meisenhelder, Susan Meisenhelder
First published: 1999
Description
"Various critics have concluded that Zora Neale Hurston simply capitulated to external demands, writing stories white people wanted to hear. Susan Edwards Meisenhelder, however, argues that Hurston's response to her situation was much more sophisticated than her critics have recognized. Meisenhelder suggests, in fact, that Hurston's work, both fictional and anthropological, constitutes an extended critique of the values of white culture and a rejection of white models for black people.
Repeatedly, Hurston's work shows the divisive effects that traditional white values, including class divisions and gender imbalances, have on blacks."--BOOK JACKET.
Repeatedly, Hurston's work shows the divisive effects that traditional white values, including class divisions and gender imbalances, have on blacks."--BOOK JACKET.
Subjects
African Americans in literature
Race relations in literature
Criticism and interpretation
Sex role in literature
African American women in literature
Women and literature
History
Noirs américains
Ethnische Beziehungen
Critique et interprétation
Dans la littérature
Noires américaines dans la littérature







