What Was African American Literature? by Kenneth W. Warren


What Was African American Literature?
Title : What Was African American Literature?
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0674049225
ISBN-10 : 9780674049222
Language : English
Format Type : Hardcover
Number of Pages : 180
Publication : First published January 3, 2011

African American literature is over. With this provocative claim Kenneth W. Warren sets out to identify a distinctly


What Was African American Literature? Reviews


  • Justin

    The book argues that what defined African American literature in the past was the legalized racism of slavery and Jim Crow. However, now that Jim Crow has ended, nothing holds together the category we commonly refer to as "African American Literature." Primarily, this is because while there has always existed certain class disparities within the black community, prior to Jim Crow any piece of black literature (even if it was elitist) was still a piece of evidence that blacks were in no way inferior and therefore a blow against legalized racism. Now, however, an elitist piece of black literature (and most literature is elitist) does nothing to help impoverished blacks since there's no codified racism to overturn. Furthermore, to continue to pursue African American literary studies as if it was the key to racial uplift is to at least tacitly endorse the idea that systemic issues in our society can be solved through individual contribution. In other words, arguing for the continued existence of African American Literature as a way to do social justice counter-productively promotes the detrimental ideology of personal responsibility.

    I like Warren's politics and I think the book raises very important issues and comes to important conclusions. However, I think his claim is just a bit too grand. It is true (and Warren acknowledges) that such explicit racism as Jim Crow is gone. However, implicit systemic racism (see Michelle Alexander's The New Jim Crow) continues unabated. So, to me, it seems more accurate to argue that African American Literature has changed since the end of Jim Crow, but I don't think you can convincingly argue that it outright ended. Alternatively, you could argue that African American literature never really existed in the first place (because of identity divides including sex, sexuality, gender, and religion) but to argue that it had existed before and that it no longer exists now simply because of Jim Crow's demise is essential to argue that laws equal culture, which I cannot agree with. I think culture is far too complex to reduce down to laws. Still, I appreciate that the book challenges a lot of the essentializing that goes on in AfAm Studies and I think the premise of the book is solid, even if the conclusion is slightly too sensational.

  • Tony Lindsay

    ‘What was African American Literature,’ the text provided thought provoking arguments, important history, reference to African American Literature, and current literary debates – overall a very good read.

  • Tom

    Interesting look into the workings of the genre of 'African American literature', which Warren claims no longer exists as a coherent genre now that segregation laws have been made obsolete and slavery is, you know, no longer a thing. Sadly, Warren forgets to actually come to a fulfilling synthesis to support his claim. Warren skims over the fact that discrimination is still a big thing, and reduces everyday racism to a small worry seeing as 'black people are now a part of a working democracy'.

    Then again, this book was written before the whole Black Lives Matter-movement came along; I would argue that this movement alone has refurbished the platform for a coherent 'African American literature' - the police shootings have shown that racism is no small worry, even nowadays. So I'm inclined to disagree with Warren when he says that African American literature is no more than a historical term of designation - it might have spent a few years trying to recompose a sense of unity, but I do believe that nowadays the message of the 'black community and its plight' is back in full fervor, and rightfully so.

  • Rosie

    2.5⭐️

  • Hannah

    Okay, I'm a little lost. On the one hand this was an overly dense book. The first two chapters spent so much time and effort historicizing African American literature that I was bored, plus I forgot that it was a book describing why a certain literature was dead, not how a certain literature arose in the first place. History was certainly necessary, but perhaps not to the extent that it was given here. On the other hand, though, the third chapter and conclusion were rather compelling, offering a good amount of arguments and frameworks for understanding the purpose and function of African American literature, as well as analyzing the homage paid to original African American literary works in contemporary works written today. And I certainly understood the point that African American literature is a slippery concept, a literature born out of specific rejections or struggles against slavery, Jim Crow and institutional racism, and its primary function is, paradoxically, to overcome a condition that created the need for the literature in the first place, and to self-define oneself in the face of a dominant culture that otherized, effectively otherizing oneself, while hoping to eliminate that need (to somewhat paraphrase Warren). In that sense, it's a lot like affirmative action--it exists in order to create a circumstance in which its existence is no longer necessary, but reactions to its existence tend to further its necessity. However, at the end of the book, I felt that Warren did more to prove that African American literature as a form of cultural preservation and reaction to racial history still does need to exist, if only for the same reason as affirmative action (that comparison is mine, not Warren's), and that without a distinct African American literature, we end up either with a whitewashed literary culture or a sell-out "African American literature" culture (meaning the stuff that Borders shelves as African American literature, which effectively equates the literary quality of Wright and Morrison with the commercial writers who write quick-sell books about baby mama drama, sex and drugs) or with a colorblind literary culture that erases racial history altogether. But I will admit that I probably got so exhausted at some points that I was not reading this as carefully as I should have.

  • Tiffany

    Argues that ""Absent white suspicions of, or commitment to imposing, black inferiority [in Jim Crow time], African American literature would not have existed as a literature" (17). Continues that "Writers of African descent would have certainly emerged and written novels, plays, and poems that merited critical attention, but the imperative to produce and consider their literature as a corporate enterprise would not have obtained. The achievement of black writers lay in their having responded creatively to the impeoatives that derives from the establishment of a social order on the basis of assumed black inferiority, not not in any transcendence of these imperatives" (18).

    The most interesting part for me in this piece, aside from the fun reading of Black No More, was the assertion that doing writing or literary criticism now on African American literature out of a motive for social justice risks doing just what Jim Crow era writers/critics did--perpetrated a sort of elite taste and control that reinforces class distinctions and illustrates larger social inequalities.

    Looking forward to raising his arguments for discussion in African American Literature, English 379, in the Spring!

  • Hollis

    This is a remarkably clear read for a seemingly provocative title and argument, which actually gets followed very thoroughly. Warren gives really strong reads on the political currents that directed prior and ongoing literary developments as well the political/academic reasons that direct scholarly discussions of Black literature both past and present. I'm very likely to read some more stuff by Warren, just for the depth+explaining of the chosen archive and his easy-to-follow prose. Highly recommended.

  • Devin

    Provocative in it's controversial claim that African American Lit ended with Jim Crow. However the book fails to make a compelling argument to justify this thesis. While informative on the history and evolution of African American literature in its various morphologies and concerns, I don't agree that we have achieved a level of social equality that would put an end to African American concerns with marginalization and institutionalized oppression.

  • Kristin

    An engaging and accessible book that claims African American literature as a distinct literature ended with the end of Jim Crow segregation. Thought-provoking for sure.

  • Eric

    Brief (the chapters were originally given as lectures) but thought-provoking.

  • Nicole

    Have I mentioned before how much I despise academic writing? How needlessly complicated the vocabulary they use, how the writing and grammar goes in circles until it's become a knot with no hope of ever being untangled, how convoluted everything is? Because I do. I despise it with every fiber of my exhausted pre-finals being. If you can't explain your argument in simple terms everyone can understand, then you're simply not a good writer. And yeah I'll admit that this wasn't written for undergrads who haven't read every single book and story and essay referenced in the book, but I still had to read it and it's not unreasonable to expect the books I must read to be comprehensible.