Race Theory and Literature: Dissemination, Criticism, Intersections

This study is based on the primary assumption that literature and racial theories have a peculiar, if not unique, interplay, offering an in-depth exploration of the very specific way in which literature and conceptions dealing with race interact. Recent scholarship has started to examine this relationship, although either with a general focus on a specific literary tradition or period, or belong more to historiography than to an aesthetic analysis. This volume, on the other hand, presents recent and stimulating scholarship extending from the eighteenth century into the twentieth. Furthermore, the literary traditions explored here differ from a geographical and cultural point of view (encompassing French, British, German, and French-Lithuanian literatures), but also from the perspective of their genre (namely, prose fiction, poetry, ethnographic literature, and essays). Among others, the reader will find reflections on authors such as Bataille, Schlegel, Coleridge, Oscar V. de L. Milosz, Kafka, Kleist, Voltaire and Buffon.


Pauline Moret-Jankus is Lecturer in French at the University of Jena, Germany. She holds a PhD in French Studies from Durham University, UK.

Adam J. Toth is Visiting Assistant Professor of German at Roanoke College, USA. He earned his PhD in German Literature and Culture from Penn State University, USA.

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Emile Bordeleau-Pitre

Sally Hatch Gray

Adam Toth

Chen Tzoref-Ashkenazi

Virginie Yvernault

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ISBN: 1-5275-3308-5

ISBN13: 978-1-5275-3308-0

Release Date: 17th June 2019

Pages: 136

Price: £58.99

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