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Henry Louis Gates Jr [8]Henry Louis Gates [5]
  1. Black Writers Tried To Write out of Slavery.Henry Louis Gates - 1986 - In Henry Louis Gates Jr (ed.), Race, Writing and Difference. University of Chicago Press.
  2.  66
    Editor's Introduction: Writing "Race" and the Difference It Makes.Henry Louis Gates Jr - 1985 - Critical Inquiry 12 (1):1-20.
    What importance does “race” have as a meaningful category in the study of literature and the shaping of critical theory? If we attempt to answer this question by examining the history of Western literature and its criticism, our initial response would probably be “nothing” or, at the very least, “nothing explicitly.” Indeed, until the past decade or so, even the most subtle and sensitive literary critics would most likely have argued that, except for aberrant moments in the history of criticism, (...)
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  3.  36
    The "Blackness of Blackness": A Critique of the Sign and the Signifying Monkey.Henry Louis Gates Jr - 1983 - Critical Inquiry 9 (4):685-723.
    Perhaps only Tar Baby is as enigmatic and compelling a figure from Afro-American mythic discourse as is that oxymoron, the Signifying Monkey.3 The ironic reversal of a received racist image of the black as simianlike, the Signifying Monkey—he who dwells at the margins of discourse, ever punning, ever troping, ever embodying the ambiguities of language—is our trope for repetition and revision, indeed, is our trope of chiasmus itself, repeating and simultaneously reversing in one deft, discursive act. If Vico and Burke, (...)
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  4.  64
    Editors' Introduction: Multiplying Identities.Kwame Anthony Appiah & Henry Louis Gates Jr - 1992 - Critical Inquiry 18 (4):625-629.
    A literary historian might very well characterize the eighties as the period when race, class, and gender became the holy trinity of literary criticism. Critical Inquiry’s contribution to this shift in critical paradigms took the form of two special issues, ”Writing and Sexual Difference,” and “‘Race,’ Writing and Difference.” In the 1990s, however, “race,” “class,” and “gender” threaten to become the regnant clichés of our critical discourse. Our object in this special issue is to help disrupt the cliché-ridden discourse of (...)
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  5.  64
    Identities.Anthony Appiah & Henry Louis Gates (eds.) - 1995 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    The study of identity crosses all disciplinary borders to address such issues as the multiple interactions of race, class, and gender in feminist, lesbian, and gay studies, postcolonialism and globalization, and the interrelation of nationalism and ethnicity in ethnic and area studies. Identities will help disrupt the cliche-ridden discourse of identity by exploring the formation of identities and problem of subjectivity. Leading scholars in literary criticism, anthropology, sociology, and philosophy explore such topics as "Gypsies" in the Western imagination, the mobilization (...)
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  6.  40
    Josephine Baker and Paul Colin: African American Dance Seen through Parisian Eyes.Karen C. C. Dalton & Henry Louis Gates Jr - 1998 - Critical Inquiry 24 (4):903-934.
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  7.  42
    Frederick Douglass’s Camera Obscura: Representing the Antislave “Clothed and in Their Own Form”.Henry Louis Gates - 2015 - Critical Inquiry 42 (1):31-60.
  8.  19
    Harlem on Our Minds.Henry Louis Gates Jr - 1997 - Critical Inquiry 24 (1):1-12.
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  9.  14
    Talkin' That Talk.Henry Louis Gates Jr - 1986 - Critical Inquiry 13 (1):203-210.
    Our decision to bracket “race” was designed to call attention to the fact that “races,” put simply, do not exist, and that to claim that they do, for whatever misguided reason, is to stand on dangerous ground. Fromm understands this all too well, it seems, judging from the satirical tone of his response. Were there not countries in which the belief in racial essences dictates social and political policy, perhaps I would have found Fromm’s essay amusing and our gesture merely (...)
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  10.  35
    Third World of Theory: Enlightenment’s Esau.Henry Louis Gates Jr - 2008 - Critical Inquiry 34 (S2):191-205.
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