Preface
Acknowledgments
1. Introduction: Approaching African American Life, History, Literature, and Criticism Polycentrically
2. History, the White/Black Binary, and the Construction of the African American as Other
3. The White/Black Binary and the African American Sociopolitical Mission of Racial Uplift
4. Finding Freedom in Sameness: James Weldon Johnson's The Autobiography of an Ex-Coloured Man
5. Disrupting the White/Black Binary: William Melvin Kelley's A Different Drummer
6. Exposing Limiting, Racialized Heterological Critical Sites: An Existential Reading of Charles Wright's The Messenger
7. The Blue Idiom Lifestyle, Counter-Hegemony, and Clarence Major's Dirty Bird Blues
8. Naming the Subaltern: The Swinging Life and Nathan Heard's Howard Street
9. Identity Politics, Sexual Fluidity, and James Earl Hardy's B-Boy Blues
10. Voodoo, A Different African American Experience, and Don Belton's Almost Midnight
11. Conclusion
Notes
Works Cited
Index