The Trouble with Sauling Around : Conversion in Ethnic American Autobiography, 1965-2002.
by
 
Walker, Madeline Ruth.

Title
The Trouble with Sauling Around : Conversion in Ethnic American Autobiography, 1965-2002.

Author
Walker, Madeline Ruth.

ISBN
9781609380649

Personal Author
Walker, Madeline Ruth.

Physical Description
1 online resource (217 pages)

Contents
Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: The Trouble with Conversion -- 1. Conversion and the Intractable Saul: The Autobiography of Malcolm X -- 2. Conversion, Deconversion, and Reversion: Oscar Zeta Acosta's Autofictions -- 3. Serial Conversion and Pauling Around: Amiri Baraka's The Autobiography of LeRoi Jones -- 4. Converting the Church: Richard Rodriguez and the Browning of Catholicism -- Conclusion: Unlinking Religious Belief and Identity -- Notes -- Works Cited -- Index.

Abstract
Examining autobiographical texts by Malcolm X (The Autobiography of Malcolm X), Oscar Zeta Acosta (The Autobiography of a Brown Buffalo and Revolt of the Cockroach People), Amiri Baraka (The Autobiography of LeRoi Jones), and Richard Rodriguez  (Hunger of Memory, Days of Obligation, and Brown), Walker questions the often rosy views and simplistic binary conceptions of religious conversion. Her reading of these texts takes into account the conflict and serial changes the authors experience in a society that marginalizes them, the manner in which religious conversion offers ethnic Americans "salvation" through cultural assimilation or cultural nationalism, and what conversion, anticonversion, and deconversion narratives tell us about the problematic effects of religion that often go unremarked because of a code of "special respect" and political correctness.   Walker asserts that critics have been too willing to praise religion in America as salutary or beyond the ken of criticism because religious belief is seen as belonging to an untouchable arena of cultural identity. The Trouble with Sauling Around goes beyond traditional literary criticism to pay close attention to the social phenomena that underlie religious conversion narratives and considers the potentially negative effects of religious conversion, something that has been likewise neglected by scholars.

Local Note
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.

Subject Term
American prose literature -- Minority authors -- History and criticism.
 
Autobiography -- African American authors.
 
Autobiography -- Mexican American authors.
 
Conversion in literature.
 
Religion and literature -- United States -- History -- 20th century.
 
Self-realization in literature.

Genre
Electronic books.

Electronic Access
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LibraryMaterial TypeItem BarcodeShelf NumberStatus
IYTE LibraryE-Book1238970-1001PS366Ebrary E-Books