Bookmarks
240 pages, 5 1/4 x 8
10
Paperback
Release Date:27 Jun 2008
ISBN:9780813543512
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Bookmarks

Reading in Black and White, First Paperback Edition

Rutgers University Press

"BookMarks is a moving and revelatory memoir... a work of fiercely intelligent scholarship." - Susan Larson, 

"Erudite and emotional in turns, [BookMarks] is full of truths that appeal to the head and the heart." - Charlotte News Observer"

What are you reading? What books have been important to you? Whether you are interviewing for a job, chatting with a friend or colleague, or making small talk, these questions arise almost unfailingly.  Some of us have stock responses, which may or may not be a fiction of our own making. Others gauge their answers according to who is asking the question. Either way, the replies that we give are thoughtfully crafted to suggest the intelligence, worldliness, political agenda, or good humor that we are hoping to convey.  We form our answers carefully because we know that our responses say a lot.

But what exactly do our answers say? In BookMarks, Karla FC Holloway explores the public side of reading, and specifically how books and booklists form a public image of African Americans. Revealing her own love of books and her quirky passion for their locations in libraries and on bookshelves, Holloway reflects on the ways that her parents guided her reading when she was young and her bittersweet memories of reading to her children. She takes us on a personal and candid journey that considers the histories of reading in children’s rooms, prison libraries, and “Negro” libraries of the early twentieth century, and that finally reveals how her identity as a scholar, a parent, and an African American woman has been subject to judgments that public cultures make about race and our habits of reading.

Holloway is the first to call our attention to a remarkable trend of many prominent African American writers—including Maya Angelou, W.E.B. Du Bois, Henry Louis Gates, Malcolm X, and Zora Neale Hurston. Their autobiographies and memoirs are consistently marked with booklists—records of their own habits of reading. She examines these lists, along with the trends of selection in Oprah Winfrey’s popular book club, raising the questions: What does it mean for prominent African Americans to associate themselves with European learning and culture? How do books by black authors fare in the inevitable hierarchy of a booklist? 

BookMarks provides a unique window into the ways that African Americans negotiate between black and white cultures. This compelling rumination on reading is a book that everyone should add to their personal collections and proudly carry “cover out.”

Erudite and emotional in turns, it is full of truths that appeal to the head and the heart. Its primary strength is its poignancy. There is a kind of mystery that holds the book together, one that commands our interest from start to finish. Little by little we learn that Holloway has suffered a terrible loss -- the death of her young son. She reveals the details slowly, impressionistically, working through her grief by turning again and again to the subject she knows best: books. American Academy of Religion Program
Part memoir, part historical research on the reading habit of writers, Karla Holloway provides the reader with a rare opportunity to reflect upon his/her own reading experience: What have you read? How did you learn to read? Where were your 'protected and isolated spaces' for reading? How has that early experience shaped your current reading? A unique contribution to our understanding of the importance of reading in shaping our culture. David S. Ferriero, Andrew W. Mellon Director and Chief Executive of the Research Libraries, New Yor
BookMarks is a moving and revelatory memoir, as Holloway contemplates her own reading history as well as that of her family...this is a work of fiercely intelligent scholarship. Susan Larson, New Orleans Times-Picayune
KARLA FC HOLLOWAY is the William Rand Kenan Jr. Professor of English, Law, and Women's Studies at Duke University. She is the author of six books including Passed On: African-American Mourning Stories and Codes of Conduct: Race, Ethics, and the Color of Our Character.
Reading and desire in a room of their own / The booklists of Jessie Fauset and Marita Golden
A negro library / The booklists of W.E.B. Du Bois, Ralph Ellison, and Richard Wright
On censorship and Tarzan / The booklists of John Hope Franklin, Sonia Sanchez, and Audre Lorde
A prison library / The booklists of Angela Davis, Malcolm X, and Eldridge Cleaver
The anchor bar / The booklists of Maya Angelou and James Baldwin
A proud chestnut / The booklists of James Weldon Johnson and Nikki Giovanni
The children's room / The booklists of Langston Hughes and Pauli Murray
My mother's singing / The booklists of C. Eric Lincoln and Leon Forrest
Reading race / The booklists of Henry Louis Gates and Michael Eric Dyson
The card catalog / The booklists of Zora Neale Hurston, J. Saunders Redding, Octavia Butler, Samuel Delaney, and Oprah Winfrey
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