User talk:Jason Sanford: Difference between revisions
imported>Jason Sanford (comment about being out of touch) |
imported>Brian Sweeney No edit summary |
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Please note that I'm traveling to a funeral for a few days and will not be able to respond until Monday, Nov. 6 to any comments.--[[User:Jason Sanford|Jason Sanford]] 15:08, 1 November 2006 (CST) | Please note that I'm traveling to a funeral for a few days and will not be able to respond until Monday, Nov. 6 to any comments.--[[User:Jason Sanford|Jason Sanford]] 15:08, 1 November 2006 (CST) | ||
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Hi Jason, | |||
I am preoccupied with non-CZ with stuff right now so I'll respond very briefly. | |||
(1)The sentence regarding Af Am lit's drawing on oral tradition preexisted my edits. My only contribution was to move it to another spot and add "sermons." It will take us more than a few days to document everything that every previous editor has ever put into this article. I welcome your assistance in this endeavor! | |||
(2)re: situating AfAm lit in broader transnational context; cf. Gilroy ''Black Atlantic'' (1993). I am exceedingly surprised that there would be any controversy about this--any more than it would be controversial to situate Southern US lit in a larger national literary & cultural context. To treat Af Am lit as a self-contained national tradition (as the original WP article does) without gesturing to its participation in a larger African diasporic culture is very 1980s. | |||
(3)I deleted some "characteristics" stuff and relocated others elsewhere. The claims I deleted seemed to me uncritically to essentialize Af Am literary production and in any case were unsourced. (I retained a sentence about oral tradition which you rightly complain is unsourced.) My intention was to restore a much revised "Characteristics" section but in a form that emphasizes debates over the meaning of AfAm lit rather than conveys the illusion of consensus. | |||
(4)length of lead--I don't see the intrinsic value of length. The original lead was needlessly repetitive and redundnant; e.g., basically narrating the history of AfAm lit from C18 to present two times, as you can see here [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African_american_literature]. Moreover the original lead described AfAm lit as "is literature written by, about, and sometimes specifically for African Americans." This is a highly debatable definition, and so I am going to move these claims from objective first paragraph to a later paragraph on debates over the boundaries of the tradition. (I'll be drawing in part on Claudia Tate's ''Psychoanalysis and Black Novels''.) | |||
These are my thoughts but you should feel free to restore information I deleted you think is of importance.[[User:Brian Sweeney|Brian Sweeney]] 21:49, 1 November 2006 (CST) |
Revision as of 21:49, 1 November 2006
Please note that I'm traveling to a funeral for a few days and will not be able to respond until Monday, Nov. 6 to any comments.--Jason Sanford 15:08, 1 November 2006 (CST)
Hi Jason,
I am preoccupied with non-CZ with stuff right now so I'll respond very briefly.
(1)The sentence regarding Af Am lit's drawing on oral tradition preexisted my edits. My only contribution was to move it to another spot and add "sermons." It will take us more than a few days to document everything that every previous editor has ever put into this article. I welcome your assistance in this endeavor!
(2)re: situating AfAm lit in broader transnational context; cf. Gilroy Black Atlantic (1993). I am exceedingly surprised that there would be any controversy about this--any more than it would be controversial to situate Southern US lit in a larger national literary & cultural context. To treat Af Am lit as a self-contained national tradition (as the original WP article does) without gesturing to its participation in a larger African diasporic culture is very 1980s.
(3)I deleted some "characteristics" stuff and relocated others elsewhere. The claims I deleted seemed to me uncritically to essentialize Af Am literary production and in any case were unsourced. (I retained a sentence about oral tradition which you rightly complain is unsourced.) My intention was to restore a much revised "Characteristics" section but in a form that emphasizes debates over the meaning of AfAm lit rather than conveys the illusion of consensus.
(4)length of lead--I don't see the intrinsic value of length. The original lead was needlessly repetitive and redundnant; e.g., basically narrating the history of AfAm lit from C18 to present two times, as you can see here [1]. Moreover the original lead described AfAm lit as "is literature written by, about, and sometimes specifically for African Americans." This is a highly debatable definition, and so I am going to move these claims from objective first paragraph to a later paragraph on debates over the boundaries of the tradition. (I'll be drawing in part on Claudia Tate's Psychoanalysis and Black Novels.)
These are my thoughts but you should feel free to restore information I deleted you think is of importance.Brian Sweeney 21:49, 1 November 2006 (CST)