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Rachel Watson, “Evidence and Racial Discourse in Segregation-Era Literature”

Rachel Watson, “Evidence and Racial Discourse in Segregation-Era Literature”
May 31, 2021 · 22m 46s

When we read most novels, we assume that characters are the most important components of a story. However, in noteworthy American literature of the segregation era, it is often forms...

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When we read most novels, we assume that characters are the most important components of a story. However, in noteworthy American literature of the segregation era, it is often forms of evidence that structure novelistic worlds, making us recognize and question the ways that details of ordinary life can take on particular significance.

In this podcast episode, Rachel Watson, assistant professor of American literature at Howard University, considers how the treatment of evidence in literature can help us to illuminate the simultaneous development of discourses around race, criminology, and crime science. She suggests that at its best, the crime genre can challenge readers by encouraging them both to question the world around them and to suspend widely held assumptions about identity and typology.

nationalhumanitiescenter.org/rachel-watson-evidence-racial-discourse-segregation-era-literature
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Author National Humanities Center
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