Race-ing *West: Propaganda and pedagogy in African American fiction, poetry, and autobiography

Paul D Reich, Purdue University

Abstract

My dissertation examines selected works of fiction, poetry, and autobiography produced by African Americans writing about the American West. Studies of Western American literature and history have long neglected these contributions to the literary and historical canon, and my work seeks to correct that deficiency. Written from an interdisciplinary perspective that includes literary, historical, racial, and cultural analyses, this study reveals authors who were concerned with contesting popular notions of the American West, re-imagining it as a place of opportunity for African Americans. These authors created instructional texts aimed at both members of their race and those outside of it, promoting their work in a variety of venues. Chapter One examines Pauline Hopkins’s Winona, a text often ignored for its reliance on Western and other seemingly incompatible generic elements. I argue that Hopkins’s decision to inundate her text with these elements was both experimental and purposeful; mixing genres becomes symbolic for her contention that interracial romance is one path for racial harmony. The next chapter looks at two autobiographies, one by black cowboy Nat Love and the other by the first African American graduate of West Point, Henry Flipper. Both Love and Flipper expose the opportunities in the West but also show its inability to divorce itself from the nation’s racial heritage. Chapters Three and Four examine two novels in Oscar Micheaux’s South Dakota trilogy. Both novels speak to the author’s own experiences in the state yet serve different purposes. A surface reading of The Conquest, for example, positions the author as a proponent for the history of Frederick Jackson Turner and the policies of Booker T. Washington; a more careful reading reveals the subtle critiques Micheaux levies against both men. Chapter Four locates The Homesteader as a response to D.W. Griffith’s Birth of a Nation. In his text, Micheaux constructs a protagonist that is honest and successful, combating the negative characterizations found in Griffith’s film. The final chapter of my dissertation studies recovered poetry from African American newspapers in Western towns. Those poets, like their literary contemporaries, reveal the complexities of the region while securing their place to imagine it.

Degree

Ph.D.

Advisors

Saunders, Purdue University.

Subject Area

American studies|Black studies|American literature|African American Studies

Off-Campus Purdue Users:
To access this dissertation, please log in to our
proxy server
.

Share

COinS