Race and Identity in Barack Obama’s Dreams from My Father: A Collection of Critical EssaysPosted in Anthologies, Barack Obama, Biography, Books, Identity Development/Psychology, Literary/Artistic Criticism, Media Archive, Passing, United States on 2012-07-23 22:09Z by Steven |
Race and Identity in Barack Obama’s Dreams from My Father: A Collection of Critical Essays
Edwin Mellen Press
June 2012
308 pages
ISBN10: 0-7734-1601-3; ISBN13: 978-0-7734-1601-7
Edited by:
Michael A. Zeitler, Associate Professor of English
Texas Southern University, Houston
Charlene T. Evans, Professor of English
Texas Southern University, Houston
This book examines significant aspects of President Barack Obama’s Dreams from My Father both in relation to the African American literary tradition and to the context of the relevant historical and cultural productions that inform it. The authors view the book a work of literature and compare it to other works by black authors such as Toni Morrison, Frederick Douglass, and Ralph Ellison among others. Some authors contest the idea that the book was written during a pre-political stage in President Obama’s life because it was released to coincide with his first political campaign in Chicago, Illinois in the mid-1990’s. For autobiographical reasons the book is important because it shows various aspects of President Obama’s upbringing, and put in his own words his experience of being black in America. There is also a discussion of why he chose the less Americanized Barack when he went into college, rather than the homogeneous, whitened name Barry, which was the name he preferred in grammar school (out of being teased by other children)—and how he chose this name precisely because it constructed his identity as antithetical to the dominant paradigms of whiteness that he had been confined to while growing up in Hawaii. One article even describes President Obama’s father being ostracized from Kenyan politics after a coup d’etat forced a leader out of power who he had publically supported, which lead the family to America. It also tells the story of a turgid paternal influence on the young Barack Obama, where caught in a vicious cycle of perpetually working for his father’s approval, he spiraled into low self-esteem, which may have fueled his political ambitions later in life (as overcompensation for a lack of fatherly approval).
Table of Contents
- Foreword / Molefi Kete Asantei
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction / Michael A. Zeitler
- A Knot to Bind Our Experiences Together: Storytelling in Barack Obama’s Dreams from My Father and Critical Race Theory / Erin Ponton Fiero
- No Apology for the Show: Performance and Oratorical Self-Creation in Obama, Douglass, and Ellison / Granville Ganter
- Slumming and Self-Making in Barack Obama’s Dreams from My Father / David Mastey
- In Search of My Father’s Garden: Kenya as the Focal Point for the Study of a New Kind of Narrative in African American Autobiography / Claire Joly
- An Image of Africa: Race and Identity in Barack Obama’s Rewriting of Conrad’s ‘Heart of Darkness’ / Michael Zeitler
- Obama, Ellison, and the Search for Identity / Rita Saylors
- Voices of His Mothers: Feminist Interventions and Identity in Barack Obama’s Dreams from My Father / Letizia Guglielmo
- Queer Coherence: Loss and Hybridity in Barack Obama’s Dreams from My Father / Patricia Harris Gillies
- The Search for Race and Masculine Identity in Barack Obama’s Dreams from My Father / Dolores Sisco
- Beyond Race: Racial Transcendence in Jean Toomer’s Cane and Barack Obama’s Dreams from My Father / Charlene T. Evans
- Glorious Burdens: A Lacanian Reading of Racial Passing, Inheritance, and Paternal Desire in Obama’s Dreams from My Father / Nicholas Powers