Mixed-Race Identity in the American South: Roots, Memory, and Family Secrets

Mixed-Race Identity in the American South: Roots, Memory, and Family Secrets

Lexington Books (an imprint of Rowman & Littlefield)
May 2021
236 pages
6½ x 9
Hardback ISBN: 978-1-7936-2706-3
eBook ISBN: 978-1-7936-2707-0

Julia Sattler, Assistant Professor of American Studies
TU Dortmund University, Dortmund, Germany

This interdisciplinary investigation argues that since the 1990s, discourses about mixed-race heritage in the United States have taken the shape of a veritable literary genre, here termed “memoir of the search.”

The study uses four different texts to explore this non-fictional genre, including Edward Ball’s Slaves in the Family and Shirlee Taylor Haizlip’s The Sweeter the Juice. All feature a protagonist using methods from archival investigation to DNA-testing to explore an intergenerational family secret; photographs and family trees; and the trip to the American South, which is identified as the site of the secret’s origin and of the family’s past. As a genre, these texts negotiate the memory of slavery and segregation in the present.

In taking up central narratives of Americanness, such as the American Dream and the Immigrant story, as well as discourses generating the American family, the texts help inscribe themselves and the mixed-race heritage they address into the American mainstream.

In its outlook, this book highlights the importance of the memoirs’ negotiations of the past when finding ways to remember after the last witnesses have passed away. and contributes to the discussion over political justice and reparations for slavery.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction: Memoir of the Search: The Emergence of a Mixed-Race Literary Genre
  • Chapter 1: Writing Mixed Selves at the Turn of the Millennium
  • Chapter 2: Family Secrets: Uncovering Mixed Race Heritage
  • Chapter 3: Media of Memory: Generating the Family
  • Chapter 4: Narrating the Mixed-Race Nation
  • Chapter 5: The Past in the Present: Encounters with the South
  • Conclusion: Making History at the Turn of the Millennium
Tags: , , ,