With close readings of more than twenty novels by writers including
Ernest Gaines, Toni Morrison, Charles Johnson, Gloria Naylor, and
John Edgar Wideman, Keith Byerman examines the trend among African
American novelists of the late twentieth century to write about
black history rather than about their own present. Employing
cultural criticism and trauma theory, Byerman frames these works as
survivor narratives that rewrite the grand American narrative of
individual achievement and the march of democracy.
The choice to write historical narratives, he says, must be
understood historically. These writers earned widespread
recognition for their writing in the 1980s, a period of African
American commercial success, as well as the economic decline of the
black working class and an increase in black-on-black crime.
Byerman contends that a shared experience of suffering joins
African American individuals in a group identity, and writing about
the past serves as an act of resistance against essentialist ideas
of black experience shaping the cultural discourse of the
present.
Byerman demonstrates that these novels disrupt the temptation in
American society to engage history only to limit its significance
or to crown successful individuals while forgetting the
victims.