Nalazite se na CroRIS probnoj okolini. Ovdje evidentirani podaci neće biti pohranjeni u Informacijskom sustavu znanosti RH. Ako je ovo greška, CroRIS produkcijskoj okolini moguće je pristupi putem poveznice www.croris.hr
izvor podataka: crosbi !

Smart Moves: Internal and External Mobility in Malcolm X's and Barack Obama's Life-Writing (CROSBI ID 544898)

Neobjavljeno sudjelovanje sa skupa | neobjavljeni prilog sa skupa

Šesnić, Jelena Smart Moves: Internal and External Mobility in Malcolm X's and Barack Obama's Life-Writing // As Your Write It: Issues in Language, Literature and Translation in the Context of Europe in the 21st Century: 2nd International Conference of the Slovene Association for the Studies of English Maribor, Slovenija, 18.09.2008-20.09.2008

Podaci o odgovornosti

Šesnić, Jelena

engleski

Smart Moves: Internal and External Mobility in Malcolm X's and Barack Obama's Life-Writing

My focus in part one will be on a classic of (Afro)-American autobiography, Malcolm X’ s 1965 record of his manifold moves, transgressions and boundary-crossings within his own community and outside of it. It can be argued that each of his migrations— and we need to remember that for African Americans mobility or the lack thereof has been a salient mark of group identity— portends also a shift in his identity make-up as we follow him moving from the country to the city, shuttling between various urban localities (the ghettoes of Boston and New York), experiencing a severe curtailment of the freedom of movement in prison simultaneously with his spiritual expansion and growth, which would culminate in his travels to Mecca and post-colonial Africa. In part two of my argument, I will examine textual self-representation undertaken by the first ever US black president, Barack Obama, in his 1995 memoirs Dreams from My Father, which is a staggering record of familial and personal mobility extending across several continents (the US mainland, Hawaii, Asia, Africa) and utterly compromising the rather clear-cut US nation-state racial and civic formations. The fact of the memoir’ s republication prompted by the momentum of a recently spectacularly closed presidential campaign, as well as the attendant repositioning of African American constituencies suggest perhaps a new mobility (be it social, political, geographic or psychological) available to or claimed by the black man in the USA nowadays.

Malcolm X; Barack Obama; Afro-American autobiography; black masculinity; mobility

nije evidentirano

nije evidentirano

nije evidentirano

nije evidentirano

nije evidentirano

nije evidentirano

Podaci o prilogu

nije evidentirano

nije evidentirano

Podaci o skupu

As Your Write It: Issues in Language, Literature and Translation in the Context of Europe in the 21st Century: 2nd International Conference of the Slovene Association for the Studies of English

predavanje

18.09.2008-20.09.2008

Maribor, Slovenija

Povezanost rada

Filologija