Eric J. Sundquist es un profesor de literatura cuyo trabajo profundiza en las intrincadas conexiones entre raza, identidad y el desarrollo de la literatura y la cultura estadounidenses. Examina críticamente cómo las obras literarias reflejan complejas relaciones intergrupales y dan forma a la identidad nacional. La erudición de Sundquist ofrece profundas perspectivas sobre los contextos culturales e históricos que han influido en las tradiciones literarias estadounidenses. Su enfoque ilumina el poder perdurable de la literatura para explorar y definir la experiencia estadounidense.
Sundquist's approach to the texts is psychoanalytic, but he does not attempt a
clinical dissection of each writer; rather, he determines how personal crisis
became material for engaging with larger questions of social and literary
crisis.
02 A unique supplement to one of the most important African American novels of this century. As Invisible Man chronicles the major moments of African American life during the first half of the twentieth century, this volume illuminates and contextualizes the novel with a collection of speeches, essays, folktales, historical analyses, photographs, and other cultural and historical documents.
Increased interest in the role of women and minorities in establishing the canon of American literature has led to renewed interest in Uncle Tom's Cabin. The essays in this volume set out to provide contemporary readers with a critical and historical interpretation of the novel that reflects the best of recent scholarship. In his introduction Eric J. Sundquist attempts to show that Uncle Tom's Cabin boldly takes issue with both proslavery arguments and prevailing prejudices among abolitionists, employing the forms of popular melodrama and heated rhetoric to carry its complex argument. The individual essays examine the influence of Stowe's novel on the characterization of women in the American novel and on later women writers, the role of women in the antislavery movement, the literary exchanges between Stowe and her contemporaries; Uncle Tom's Cabin and the tradition of the Gothic novel, and the characterizations of blacks in this novel and in later works.