Environmental Knowledge, Race, and African American Literature 2023
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-82102-9_1
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Introduction: African American Environmental Knowledge at Niagara

Abstract: To define the concept of environmental knowledge and illustrate its potential for ecocritical readings of nineteenth-century African American literature, this chapter turns to two texts about Niagara Falls, a handwritten note by Frederick Douglass (1843) and Charles W. Chesnutt’s short story “The Passing of Grandison” (1899). While Douglass’s note exemplifies how black writers could transform dominant aesthetic modes such as the sublime to utter social critique through expressing epistemological and ethical re… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...

Citation Types

0
0
0

Publication Types

Select...

Relationship

0
0

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 0 publications
references
References 55 publications
0
0
0
Order By: Relevance

No citations

Set email alert for when this publication receives citations?