"Lively's writing is smart but accessible. He wears his scholarship gracefully and writes (thank God) like a novelist, not an academic....
Masks provides an elegant overview of how Western society constructed 'blackness' over hundreds of years. I don't know of any work that covers the map from orientalism to racist imperialism so efficiently. This is quite a fresh, even startling book."--Diane Roberts, author of
Faulkner and Southern Womanhood and
The Myth of Aunt Jemima"For readers in the United States who, on a consensual level, never identify themselves as being racists or living in a racist society, Lively's book is a much needed antidote. It offers valuable insights into the specific meanings of black experience."--Charles Long, author of
Significations: Signs, Symbols, and Images in the Interpretation of Religion"Erudite, but not over-academic,
Masks is a brilliant survey of how 'blackness' figures in the novel."--
Esquire"A sophisticated survey of the culture of race... this book lucidly covers important cultural territory."--
Sunday Times (London)
"An epic of the evolution of racial consciousness and identity in both history and canonical literature from the 18th to the 20th centuries."--Sherri Barnes,
Library Journal
What is "race"? A biological fact, a social construction, or an assumed disguise? InMasks: Blackness, Race and the Imagination, acclaimed novelist and critic Adam Lively offers a brilliant exploration of how the concept of blackness has evolved in Western thought and literature, and how changing notions of racial identity helped to shape modern consciousness.
Lively traces ideas of racial difference to their earliest expressions in European culture, at the time of the Europeans' first encounters with African and American peoples, and follows these ideas to their current incarnations in contemporary America and the Caribbean. He explores the various and sometimes reversible ways in which racial identity has functioned as a mask: the pure white soul inside the black person; the primitive, dark soul ready to break through the civilized white veneer; the "invisible" black whose identity consists of projected white fears. Examining a wide range of works over the last three centuries--including slave autobiographies, sentimental romances, propagandist verse, natural history, jazz (which he calls "a music of disguises") and such 20th-century writers as Jean Genet, Joseph Conrad, Richard Wright, James Baldwin, Ralph Ellison, John Updike, Eugene O'Neill, and others--Lively explores the fluidity of racial identity. He argues that the modernist concern with the uncertainties of identity and indeed that modernism's relativistic, ironic, pluralistic, and perpetually questioning characteristics are derived largely from black experience of a shifting sense of self.
Lucidly written and covering an enormous historical expanse, Masks uncovers the changing ways we have tried to understand the elusive and often illusory nature of racial identity.