Whiteness as Cursed Property: An Interdisciplinary Intervention with Joyce Carol Oates’s Bellefleur and Cheryl Harris’s “Whiteness as Property”
This article begins with the assertion that now more than ever, in the aftermath of Ferguson and in a time when many believe our society to be post-racial, we need to bring together scholars and activists who care about racial justice, regardless of discipline, and build interdisciplinary tools for...
Main Author: | Karen Gaffney |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
University of San Francisco
2015-02-01
|
Series: | Bearing Witness: Joyce Carol Oates Studies |
Online Access: | http://repository.usfca.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1008&context=jcostudies |
Similar Items
-
Reading Nostalgia, Anger, and the Home in Joyce Carol Oates’s Foxfire
by: Heather A. Hillsburg
Published: (2014-07-01) -
Hybridism and Self-Reconstruction in Joyce Carol Oates’s A Widow’s Story
by: Pascale Antolin
Published: (2015-09-01) -
Initiated into Subordination. On Joyce Carol Oates’s I’ll Take You There
by: Zawadzka Anna
Published: (2016-12-01) -
The Role of New Orleans Parish Prison in Joyce Carol Oates’s “Aiding and Abetting”
by: Tanya TROMBLE
Published: (2016-12-01) -
Photographic (Over) Exposures in the Nuclear Age in Joyce Carol Oates’s You Must Remember This
by: Sonia Weiner
Published: (2019-11-01)