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العنوان
Decolonizing the Black Mind in John Edgar Wideman’s The Homewood Trilogy (1985) /
المؤلف
Mahmoud, Mahmoud Refaat Abd-Ellah.
هيئة الاعداد
باحث / محمود رفعت عبد اللاه محمود
مشرف / فدوي كمال عبدالرحمنفدوي كمال عبدالرحمن
مشرف / يمني محمد صابر
الموضوع
English literature.
تاريخ النشر
2016.
عدد الصفحات
268 p. :
اللغة
الإنجليزية
الدرجة
الدكتوراه
التخصص
اللغة واللسانيات
الناشر
تاريخ الإجازة
1/1/2016
مكان الإجازة
جامعة عين شمس - كلية الألسن - اللغة الإنجليزية
الفهرس
Only 14 pages are availabe for public view

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from 286

Abstract

This study sets out to position John Edgar Wideman within the genre of African American literature as a distinguished well-established writer of fine skills, and bring him to academic attention. It is also an attempt to contextualize the contemporary black male’s dilemma, exploring the circumstances that shape black manhood and produce the ill stereotypical representations related to it. Up till today, Black men struggle to realize their manhood in the face of a patriarchal society that stereotypes them and deprives them from realizing their manhood. A decolonization of the black male figure proves to be crucial for a better understanding of the contemporary black male experience. Accordingly the study reads the black experience as a colonial struggle against systematized subjugation and oppression. Wideman’s The Homewood Trilogy is read against this background to highlight one of his major contributions in African American literature: his decolonization of the black mind and representation of black manhood. The study follows an analytical approach, relying on a cliché of masculinity, postcolonial, and postmodernists theoretical models. A set of non-traditional narrative techniques is employed in the trilogy that serve to problematize, challenge, and eventually deconstruct and discredit Western values to ultimately decolonize black manhood from colonial hegemonic effects. Eventually, Wideman is able to claim an authorial voice over self-representation as a black man and more importantly decolonize the contemporary black experience and the black male figure.