Book contents
- A History of the Surrealist Novel
- A History of the Surrealist Novel
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- I Marvellous Beginnings
- II Transgression and Excess
- III Science, Alchemy, Nature
- IV Transnational Surrealism
- Chapter 16 Nature and Surrealism in the Latin American Novel of the Tropics
- Chapter 17 Surrealism, Existentialism, and Fictions of Blackness
- Chapter 18 Social Critique in the Japanese Post-War Surrealist Novel
- Chapter 19 The World of the Surrealist Novel
- Chapter 20 Feminist-Surrealism in the Contemporary Novel
- Afterword
- Index
Chapter 17 - Surrealism, Existentialism, and Fictions of Blackness
from IV - Transnational Surrealism
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 February 2023
- A History of the Surrealist Novel
- A History of the Surrealist Novel
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- I Marvellous Beginnings
- II Transgression and Excess
- III Science, Alchemy, Nature
- IV Transnational Surrealism
- Chapter 16 Nature and Surrealism in the Latin American Novel of the Tropics
- Chapter 17 Surrealism, Existentialism, and Fictions of Blackness
- Chapter 18 Social Critique in the Japanese Post-War Surrealist Novel
- Chapter 19 The World of the Surrealist Novel
- Chapter 20 Feminist-Surrealism in the Contemporary Novel
- Afterword
- Index
Summary
This chapter examines the history of Black diasporic fiction in the Atlantic world as it informed, and continues to be informed by, the artistic and geopolitical coordinates of the surrealist movement. From the surrealist interest in and appropriation of Blackness in Jazz-age Paris through the post-WWII development of pan-African and Third World movements, the writing and cultural production of African, Afro-Caribbean, and African American intellectuals fuelled the global development of leftist and anti-colonial politics. So too did Black writing and art both inform and, in part, constitute the proliferation of aesthetic radicalism throughout the Atlantic world. This chapter traces the intersecting histories of surrealism, existentialism, and the Black radical tradition through the production of fiction; in doing so it traces the politics of literary activism – as well as the vexed histories of racism, cultural appropriation, exploitation, and erasure – in the work of Black writers of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. It contends not only that surrealism should be understood as a significant coordinate in the Black radical tradition (as e.g. Robin D.G. Kelley has demonstrated), but also that the surrealist movement is inconceivable without an appraisal of its relation to race, diaspora, and the writing and cultural production of Black intellectuals.
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- A History of the Surrealist Novel , pp. 295 - 312Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023