I Heard It Through the Grapevine: Rumor in African-American Culture

Portada
University of California Press, 1993 M09 28 - 260 páginas
This book divides into two basic parts. In Chapters 1 and 2 I discuss historical examples of "rumor" discourse and suggest whey many blacks have--for good reason--channeled beliefs about race relations into familiar formulae, ones developed as early as the time of the first contact between sub-Saharan Africans and European white. Then in Chapters 3-7 it explores the continuation of these issues in late-twentieth-century African-American rumors and contemporary legends, using examples collected in the field. Because Turner was able to monitor these contemporary legends as they unfolded and played themselves out, rigorous analysis was possible. What follows, then, is an examination of the themes common to these contemporary items and related historical ones, and an explanation for their persistence. Concerns about conspiracy, contamination, cannibalism, and castration--perceived threats to individual black bodies, which are then translated into animosity toward the race as a whole--run through nearly four hundred years of black contemporary legend material and prove remarkable tenacious. 
 

Contenido

They doe eat each other alive
9
They want to beat us burn
33
whatever they can do 3333
57
They the powers that
108
They want to do more than just
137
They wont get me
165
See they want us to take all of those drugs
180
From Cannibalism to Crack
202
Continuing Concerns
221
Bibliography
245
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