Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Claude McKay’s Bad Nationalists

View through CrossRef
Abstract This article examines Claude McKay’s 1928 journey to Africa under colonial occupation and uncovers how these true events partly inspired his late work of expatriate fiction, Romance in Marseille. By bringing together migration studies with literary history, the article challenges and expands existing research that suggests that McKay’s writings register the impulse for a nomadic wandering away from oppressive forms of identity control set up in the wake of World War I. The article contends that Claude McKay’s renegade cast of “bad nationalist” characters registers a generative tension between the imperial national forms the author encountered in North Africa and the Black nationalist vision of Marcus Garvey’s Back-to-Africa campaign. Reading the dialectics of bad nationalisms and Black internationalisms, the article explores how the utopian promise for Black liberation by returning back to Africa, central to the New Negro project of Black advancement, frequently becomes entangled in McKay’s transnational stowaway fiction with conflicting calls for reparations, liabilities, and shipping damages.
Duke University Press
Title: Claude McKay’s Bad Nationalists
Description:
Abstract This article examines Claude McKay’s 1928 journey to Africa under colonial occupation and uncovers how these true events partly inspired his late work of expatriate fiction, Romance in Marseille.
By bringing together migration studies with literary history, the article challenges and expands existing research that suggests that McKay’s writings register the impulse for a nomadic wandering away from oppressive forms of identity control set up in the wake of World War I.
The article contends that Claude McKay’s renegade cast of “bad nationalist” characters registers a generative tension between the imperial national forms the author encountered in North Africa and the Black nationalist vision of Marcus Garvey’s Back-to-Africa campaign.
Reading the dialectics of bad nationalisms and Black internationalisms, the article explores how the utopian promise for Black liberation by returning back to Africa, central to the New Negro project of Black advancement, frequently becomes entangled in McKay’s transnational stowaway fiction with conflicting calls for reparations, liabilities, and shipping damages.

Related Results

What’s Bad about Friendship with Bad People?
What’s Bad about Friendship with Bad People?
AbstractIs there something bad about being friends with seriously bad people? Intuitively, it seems so, but it is hard to see why this should be. This is especially the case since ...
Bad Faith in Film Spectatorship
Bad Faith in Film Spectatorship
This article seeks to develop an under-appreciated aspect of spectator activity: the way in which viewers make use of film to enter or sustain a project of bad faith. Based on Jean...
On bad groups, bad fields, and pseudoplanes
On bad groups, bad fields, and pseudoplanes
Cherlin introduced the concept of bad groups (of finite Morley rank) in [Ch1]. The existence of such groups is an open question. If they exist, they will contradict the Cherlin-Zil...
Type two cuts, bad cuts and very bad cut
Type two cuts, bad cuts and very bad cut
AbstractType two cuts, bad cuts and very bad cuts are introduced in [10] for studying the relationship between Loeb measure and U-topology of a hyperfinite time line in an ω1-satur...
How to deliver bad news to me? Suggestions for preparing Muslim patients before breaking bad news
How to deliver bad news to me? Suggestions for preparing Muslim patients before breaking bad news
There are several models for delivering bad news, the most important and widely used being the SPIKES protocol. Cultural differences in breaking bad news in different societies wit...
Do What You Want: The Story of Bad Religion, Bad Religion and Jim Ruland (2020)
Do What You Want: The Story of Bad Religion, Bad Religion and Jim Ruland (2020)
Review of: Do What You Want: The Story of Bad Religion, Bad Religion and Jim Ruland (2020)New York: Hachette Book Group, 324 pp.,ISBN 978-0-30692-222-0, h/bk, $28...
When it can be good to feel bad and bad to feel good: Exploring asymmetries in workplace emotional outcomes
When it can be good to feel bad and bad to feel good: Exploring asymmetries in workplace emotional outcomes
Within the field of Management and Organizational Studies, we have noted a tendency for researchers to explore symmetrical relationships between so-called positive discrete emotion...
Rethinking Compensation for Bad Luck
Rethinking Compensation for Bad Luck
Luck egalitarianism (LE, henceforth) is a fairly prominent theory of justice. While there are many versions of LE, they all agree that, at least to some extent, it is unjust for in...

Back to Top