| A Choice Outstanding Academic Title
With The Tempest’s
Caliban, Shakespeare created an
archetype in the modern era depicting black men as slaves and
savages who threaten civilization. As contemporary black male fiction writers
have tried to free their subjects and themselves from this legacy to
tell a story of liberation, they often unconsciously retell the
story, making their heroes into modern-day Calibans. Coleman analyzes the
modern and postmodern novels of John Edgar Wideman, Clarence Major, Charles
Johnson, William Melvin Kelley, Trey Ellis, David Bradley, and Wesley Brown.
He traces the Caliban legacy to early literary influences, primarily Ralph Ellison,
and then deftly demonstrates its contemporary manifestations. This engaging study challenges those who
argue for the liberating possibilities of the postmodern narrative, as Coleman reveals the
pervasiveness and influence of Calibanic discourse.
At the heart of James Coleman’s study is the perceived history of the black
male in Western culture and the traditional racist stereotypes indigenous to the
language. Calibanic discourse, Coleman argues, so deeply and subconsciously
influences the texts of black male writers that they are unable to cast off the
oppression inherent in this discourse. Coleman wants to change the perception of
black male writers’ struggle with oppression by showing that it is their special
struggle with language. Black Male Fiction and the Legacy of Caliban is
the first book to analyze a substantial body of black male fiction from a
central perspective.
James W. Coleman, Professor of English at the University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill, is the author of Blackness and Modernism: The Literary Career
of John Edgar Wideman. He lives in Durham, North
Carolina.
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