TY - JOUR
T1 - The transatlantic mysteries of Paris
T2 - Chester Himes, surrealism, and the Série Noire
AU - Eburne, Jonathan P.
N1 - Copyright:
Copyright 2020 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2005
Y1 - 2005
N2 - This essay examines Chester Himes's transformation, in 1957, from a writer of African American social protest fiction into a "French" writer of Harlem crime thrillers. Instead of representing the exhaustion of his political commitment, Himes's transformation from a "serious" writer of didactic fictioṅ into an exiled crime novelist represents a radical change in political and literary tactics. In dialogue with the editor and former surrealist Marcel Duhamel, Himes's crime fiction, beginning with La reine des pommes (now A Rage in Harlem), invents a darkly comic fictional universe that shares an affinity with the surrealist notion of black humor in its vehement denial of epistemological and ethical certainty. Rejecting the efforts of Richard Wright and the existentialists to adopt an engaged form of political writing, Himes's crime fiction instead forges a kind of vernacular surrealism, one independent of the surrealist movement but nevertheless sharing surrealism's insistence on the volatility of written and political expression. (JPE)
AB - This essay examines Chester Himes's transformation, in 1957, from a writer of African American social protest fiction into a "French" writer of Harlem crime thrillers. Instead of representing the exhaustion of his political commitment, Himes's transformation from a "serious" writer of didactic fictioṅ into an exiled crime novelist represents a radical change in political and literary tactics. In dialogue with the editor and former surrealist Marcel Duhamel, Himes's crime fiction, beginning with La reine des pommes (now A Rage in Harlem), invents a darkly comic fictional universe that shares an affinity with the surrealist notion of black humor in its vehement denial of epistemological and ethical certainty. Rejecting the efforts of Richard Wright and the existentialists to adopt an engaged form of political writing, Himes's crime fiction instead forges a kind of vernacular surrealism, one independent of the surrealist movement but nevertheless sharing surrealism's insistence on the volatility of written and political expression. (JPE)
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U2 - 10.1632/003081205x63877
DO - 10.1632/003081205x63877
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:60950483882
SN - 0030-8129
VL - 120
SP - 806-821+976
JO - PMLA
JF - PMLA
IS - 3
ER -