Labor Pains
232 pages, 6 x 9
4 b&w illustrations
Paperback
Release Date:24 Apr 2019
ISBN:9781496824073
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Hardcover
Release Date:29 Apr 2019
ISBN:9781496821775
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Labor Pains

New Deal Fictions of Race, Work, and Sex in the South

University Press of Mississippi

From the 1930s to the 1960s, the Popular Front produced a significant era in African American literary radicalism. While scholars have long associated the black radicalism of the Popular Front with the literary Left and the working class, Christin Marie Taylor considers how black radicalism influenced southern fiction about black workers, offering a new view of work and labor.

At the height of the New Deal era and its legacies, Taylor examines how southern literature of the Popular Front not only addressed the familiar stakes of race and labor but also called upon an imagined black folk to explore questions of feeling and desire. By poring over tropes of black workers across genres of southern literature in the works of George Wylie Henderson, William Attaway, Eudora Welty, and Sarah Elizabeth Wright, Taylor reveals the broad reach of black radicalism into experiments with portraying human feelings.

These writers grounded interrelationships and stoked emotions to present the social issues of their times in deeply human terms. Taylor emphasizes the multidimensional use of the sensual and the sexual, which many protest writers of the period, such as Richard Wright, avoided. She suggests Henderson and company used feeling to touch readers while also questioning and reimagining the political contexts and apparent victories of their times.

Taylor shows how these fictions adopted the aesthetics and politics of feeling as a response to New Deal–era policy reforms, both in their successes and their failures. In effect, these writers, some who are not considered a part of an African American protest tradition, illuminated an alternative form of protest through poignant paradigms.

Awards

  • , Winner - Eudora Welty Prize
Labor Pains significantly expands Popular Front scholarship and is rewarding reading specially for students of southern and African American literature. Annette Trefzer, The Southern Register
Christin Marie Tayloroffers a revealing and rewarding portrait of the souls of black folk—confessed and imaginary—in the writing of the Popular Front. She breaks the mold of most earlier scholarship on US literary radicalism in her focus on a specifically southern modernism and in her shift of attention from labor representation to labor affect, from the capital-P politics to the pleasures and pains of unrecognized black work. William J. Maxwell, author of F.B. Eyes: How J. Edgar Hoover’s Ghostreaders Framed African American Literature and New Negro, Old Left: African-American Writing and Communism Between the Wars

Christin Marie Taylor is assistant professor of English at Shenandoah University. Taylor’s work has appeared in Southern Quarterly, Southern Cultures, American Literature in Transition: 19601970, and the Encyclopedia of Hip Hop Literature as well as Teaching the Works of Eudora Welty: Twenty-First-Century Approaches, published by University Press of Mississippi.

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