Description

Book Synopsis

Fiction provides the possibility for radical empathy by connecting us with strangers and Radical Empathy in Multicultural Women’s Fiction: From the Library to Liberation both analyzes and embodies this phenomenon by putting women novelists of color in conversation with one another. Foregrounding the growing importance of intersectionality studies, this book considers how race, gender, and class interact for each author. In our increasingly fragmented national dialogue, this approach is unique and timely, demonstrating how novels can transform how we understand ourselves and act towards others.

Each chapter compares a contemporary female author to an earlier, canonical author of her ethnic background, depicting the dialogues that authors have across the decades. Each conversation focuses on an intersectional question: How has culturally-enforced silence impacted Asian women writers? How can the American road trip narrative provide Black men access to their pasts? How do poverty and gentrification impact Chicana coming-of-age stories? Finally, the book facilitates a dialogue across ethnic categories, considering what commonalities all women writers of color share in the contemporary United States, and how their conversations can reach and impact readers to take the crucial step from empathy to action in their own communities.



Table of Contents

A Personal Preface

Introduction

Chapter One: The Case for Radical Empathy in Fiction

Chapter Two: “Not merely unspoken, but unspeakable”: The Silences of Celeste Ng and Maxine Hong Kingston

Chapter Three: Journeys Within: Black Men on the Road in Song of Solomon and Sing,

Chapter Four: Trees in Concrete: Shifting Classes and Changing Neighborhoods in Sandra Cisneros and Kali Fajardo-Anstine

Chapter Five: Literary Remix

Appendix: Multicultural Book Club

Acknowledgements

Works Cited

About the Author

Radical Empathy in Multicultural Women’s Fiction:

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    A Hardback by Lara Narcisi

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      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 31/07/2023
      ISBN13: 9781666921502, 978-1666921502
      ISBN10: 1666921505

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Fiction provides the possibility for radical empathy by connecting us with strangers and Radical Empathy in Multicultural Women’s Fiction: From the Library to Liberation both analyzes and embodies this phenomenon by putting women novelists of color in conversation with one another. Foregrounding the growing importance of intersectionality studies, this book considers how race, gender, and class interact for each author. In our increasingly fragmented national dialogue, this approach is unique and timely, demonstrating how novels can transform how we understand ourselves and act towards others.

      Each chapter compares a contemporary female author to an earlier, canonical author of her ethnic background, depicting the dialogues that authors have across the decades. Each conversation focuses on an intersectional question: How has culturally-enforced silence impacted Asian women writers? How can the American road trip narrative provide Black men access to their pasts? How do poverty and gentrification impact Chicana coming-of-age stories? Finally, the book facilitates a dialogue across ethnic categories, considering what commonalities all women writers of color share in the contemporary United States, and how their conversations can reach and impact readers to take the crucial step from empathy to action in their own communities.



      Table of Contents

      A Personal Preface

      Introduction

      Chapter One: The Case for Radical Empathy in Fiction

      Chapter Two: “Not merely unspoken, but unspeakable”: The Silences of Celeste Ng and Maxine Hong Kingston

      Chapter Three: Journeys Within: Black Men on the Road in Song of Solomon and Sing,

      Chapter Four: Trees in Concrete: Shifting Classes and Changing Neighborhoods in Sandra Cisneros and Kali Fajardo-Anstine

      Chapter Five: Literary Remix

      Appendix: Multicultural Book Club

      Acknowledgements

      Works Cited

      About the Author

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