Psychology Comes to Harlem: Rethinking the Race Question in Twentieth-Century America

Psychology Comes to Harlem: Rethinking the Race Question in Twentieth-Century America

by Jay Garcia
Psychology Comes to Harlem: Rethinking the Race Question in Twentieth-Century America

Psychology Comes to Harlem: Rethinking the Race Question in Twentieth-Century America

by Jay Garcia

eBook

$41.49  $55.00 Save 25% Current price is $41.49, Original price is $55. You Save 25%.

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

In the years preceding the modern civil rights era, cultural critics profoundly affected American letters through psychologically informed explorations of racial ideology and segregationist practice. Jay Garcia’s probing look at how and why these critiques arose and the changes they wrought demonstrates the central role Richard Wright and his contemporaries played in devising modern antiracist cultural analysis.

Departing from the largely accepted existence of a “Negro Problem,” Wright and such literary luminaries as Ralph Ellison, Lillian Smith, and James Baldwin described and challenged a racist social order whose psychological undercurrents implicated all Americans and had yet to be adequately studied. Motivated by the elastic possibilities of clinical and academic inquiry, writers and critics undertook a rethinking of "race" and assessed the value of psychotherapy and psychological theory as antiracist strategies. Garcia examines how this new criticism brought together black and white writers and became a common idiom through fiction and nonfiction that attracted wide readerships.

An illuminating picture of mid-twentieth-century American literary culture and learned life, Psychology Comes to Harlem reveals the critical and intellectual innovation of literary artists who bridged psychology and antiracism to challenge segregation.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781421405414
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Publication date: 05/14/2012
Series: New Studies in American Intellectual and Cultural History
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 232
File size: 2 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Jay Garcia is an associate professor of comparative literature at New York University.

Read an Excerpt

The writers I concentrate upon in this study maintained that emotional and behavioral patterns helped sustain racial ideologies and, concomitantly, that racial ideologies were national and cultural problems requiring individual and collective investigation. In much the same manner as their counterparts in social psychology, they chose to explore a range of phenomena—the inferiority complexes of racial minorities, the neuroses that nurtured racist behavior, and, not least, the psychological harms and scars that characterized the workings of segregated social conditions generally—through writing that challenged available forms of public deliberation. Beginning in the early 1940s, African American writers and white allies accelerated efforts to find a searching and accessible idiom with which to analyze the hazards of race hierarchy and expand avenues for antiracism. Major changes in the character of psychological research, especially the demise of scientific racism, along with the antifascism of the 1930s and 1940s, enabled these efforts and led to a period when modern psychological thought reorganized the vocabulary and scope of antiracist cultural criticism.

—from the Introduction

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Richard Wright Writing: The Unconscious Machinery of Race Relations
2. Richard Wright Reading: The Promise of Social Psychiatry
3. Race and Minorities from Below: The Wartime Cultural Criticism of Chester Himes, Horace Cayton, Ralph Ellison, and C. L. R. James
4. Strange Fruit: Lillian Smith and the Making of Whiteness
5. Notes on a Native Son: James Baldwin in Postwar America
Conclusion
Notes
Essay on Sources
Index

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews