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Events

Jun. 30 | 2012 Bode-Pearson Prize
Nominations for the 2012 Bode-Pearson Prize for Outstanding Contributions to American Studies due

Jun. 30 | 2012 Mary C. Turpie Prize
Nominations for the 2012 Mary C. Turpie Prize for Outstanding Contributions to American Studies Teaching, Advising, and Program Development due

Oct. 1 | Travel Grants for Graduate Students
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Resources: Abstracts of American Studies Dissertations

By University | By Year

Newlyn, Andrea Kelsey. "Righting the Racial Code: Narrative and Race," Departments of English and American Studies, Indiana University, February 1999.

My dissertation brings together two critical discourses—narrative theory and critical race studies—to examine how constructions of “race” coincide with, reinforce, limit, or regulate narrative form. Specifically, I examine texts depicting what I call transracial movement and embodiment. Transracial narratives span antebellum and postbellum cultures, and incorporate the sentimental, realist, modern, and postmodern traditions, as well as the African-American racial uplift tradition. In analyzing the ways in which constructions of race and racial ideologies inform and inflect narrative form, this dissertation stresses the gendered, sexual, and class dynamics of racial crossing and identity, suggesting how dominant racial ideologies interact with patriarchy and capitalist class structures in defining the possibilities and limits of narrative.