BookMarks,
first Paperback Edition
Price: $19.95
Subtitle:
A Reading in Black
and White; A Memoir
Author:
Karla C. Holloway
Subject:
African-American Studies,
Literary Studies
Paper
ISBN 978-0-8135-4351-2
Pages:
224 pages
Publication Date:
July 2008
Praise
for BookMarks
“Erudite and emotional in turns, it is full of truths that
appeal to the head and the heart. Its primary strength is its
poignancy. There is a kind of mystery that holds the book together, one
that commands our interest from start to finish. Little by little we
learn that Holloway has suffered a terrible loss -- the death of her
young son. She reveals the details slowly, impressionistically, working
through her grief by turning again and again to the subject she knows
best: books.”
—The News and Observer (Raleigh, NC)
"BookMarks is a moving and revelatory memoir, as
Holloway contemplates her own reading history as well as that of her
family...this is a work of fiercely intelligent scholarship."
—Susan Larson, New Orleans Times-Picayune
Description:
In BookMarks,
Karla FC Holloway explores the public side of reading, and specifically
how books and booklists form a public image of African Americans.
Revealing her own love of books and her quirky passion for their
locations in libraries and on bookshelves, Holloway reflects on the
ways that her parents guided her reading when she was young and her
bittersweet memories of reading to her children. She takes us on a
personal and candid journey that considers the histories of reading in
children's rooms, prison libraries, and "Negro" libraries of the early
twentieth century, and that finally reveals how her identity as a
scholar, a parent, and an African American woman has been subject to
judgments that public cultures make about race and our habits of
reading.
Holloway is the first to call our attention to a remarkable trend of
many prominent African American writers-including Maya Angelou, W.E.B.
Du Bois, Henry Louis Gates, Malcolm X, and Zora Neale Hurston. Their
autobiographies and memoirs are consistently marked with
booklists-records of their own habits of reading. She examines these
lists, along with the trends of selection in Oprah Winfrey's popular
book club, raising the questions: What does it mean for prominent
African Americans to associate themselves with European learning and
culture? How do books by black authors fare in the inevitable hierarchy
of a booklist?
About the Author:
Karla FC Holloway is the William Rand Kenan Jr.
Professor of English, Law, and Women's Studies at Duke University. She
is the author of six books including Passed On: African-American
Mourning Stories and Codes of Conduct: Race, Ethics, and the
Color of Our Character.
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Price: $19.95
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