Sauling around : the trouble with conversion in African American and Mexican American autobiography, 1965-2002

dc.contributor.authorWalker, Madeline Ruth
dc.contributor.supervisorDouglas, Christopher
dc.date.accessioned2010-04-08T21:24:23Z
dc.date.available2010-04-08T21:24:23Z
dc.date.copyright2008en
dc.date.issued2010-04-08T21:24:23Z
dc.degree.departmentDept. of Englishen
dc.degree.levelDoctor of Philosophy Ph.D.en
dc.description.abstractWhile the social sciences have interrogated religious conversions as intensely social, historically situated phenomena, literary studies has not focused the same scrutiny on these textually rendered events and the forces that shape them. This dissertation explores religious conversion and resistance to conversion in African American and Mexican American autobiography from 1965 to 2002, with attention to conversion's social context and its potential for harm. Constant change and the negotiation of resistance and assimilation to the dominant culture are seminal topics for ethnic Americans; the conversion narrative is therefore often seen as a normative genre in ethnic writing, particularly ethnic autobiography. For the most part, religious conversion in African American and Mexican American autobiography has either been ignored or misread as normal and beneficial, even though the binaries of black Christianity versus Nation of Islam, and Catholicism versus Protestantism are sites of religious and racial ambivalence in these two ethnic traditions. The autobiographical texts of Malcolm X, Oscar Zeta Acosta. Amid Barak, and Richard Rodriguez call into question rosy views of conversion and suggest that we need to examine how conversion stories sometimes erase difference and cover over discourses of power. The American multicultural ideal of religious pluralism has meant that critics are too ready to praise religious conversion in America as advantageous or beyond the ken of criticism because religious belief is seen as belonging to the untouchable arena of cultural identity.en
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1828/2531
dc.languageEnglisheng
dc.language.isoenen
dc.rights.tempAvailable to the World Wide Weben
dc.subjectAfrican Americansen
dc.subjectMexican Americansen
dc.subjectAutobiographyen
dc.subjectUnited Statesen
dc.subject.lcshUVic Subject Index::Humanities and Social Sciences::Literature::American literatureen
dc.titleSauling around : the trouble with conversion in African American and Mexican American autobiography, 1965-2002en
dc.typeThesisen

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