ABSTRACT

How do twentieth and twenty-first century artists bring forth the powerful reality of death when it exists in memory and lived experience as something that happens only to others? Death in American Texts and Performances takes up this question to explore the modern and postmodern aesthetics of death. Working between and across genres, the contributors examine literary texts and performance media, including Robert Lowell's For the Union Dead, Luis Valdez' Dark Root of a Scream, Amiri Baraka's Dutchman, Thornton Wilder's Our Town, John Edgar Wideman's The Cattle Killing, Toni Morrison's Sula and Song of Solomon, Don DeLillo's White Noise and Falling Man, and HBO's Six Feet Under. As the contributors struggle to convey the artist's crisis of representation, they often locate the dilemma in the gap between artifice and nature, where loss is performed and where re-membering is sometimes literally reenacted through the bodily gesture. While artists confront the impossibility of total recovery or transformation, so must the contributors explore the gulf between real corpses and their literary or performative reconstructions. Ultimately, the volume shows both artist and critic grappling with the dilemma of showing how the aesthetics of death as absence is made meaningful in and by language.

part I|68 pages

Studying the Corpse

chapter Chapter 2|16 pages

Skins of Desire in Evolution

The Black and White Murder Film, Dutchman

chapter Chapter 4|14 pages

Dust to Dust and the Spaces in Between

Six Feet Under, The Gate's Ajar, and the Meaning of Death in American Christian Theology

part II|72 pages

Tracing Ghosts

chapter Chapter 5|21 pages

Thornton Wilder's “Eternal Present”

Ghosting and the Grave Body in Act III of Our Town

chapter Chapter 6|14 pages

When Ghosts Dream

Immigrant Desire in Lan Samantha Chang's Hunger

chapter Chapter 7|16 pages

A Return to Memory, Possibility, and Life

The Spirit of Narrative in John Edgar Wideman's The Cattle Killing

part III|62 pages

Reanimating the Dead

chapter |15 pages

“For the Union Dead”

Robert Lowell's American Necropolis

chapter Chapter 10|20 pages

Locating the Front Line

War, Democracy, and the Nation in Toni Morrison's Sula and Song of Solomon

chapter Chapter 12|12 pages

“Everything now is measured by after” 1

A Postmortem for the Twenty-First Century