{"product_id":"playing-the-races","title":"Playing the Races","description":"\u003cp\u003eWhy did so many of the writers who aligned themselves with the social and aesthetic aims of American literary realism rely on stock conventions of ethnic caricature in their treatment of immigrant and African-American figures? As a self-described \"tool of the democratic spirit,\" designed to \"prick the bubble of abstract types,\" literary realism would seem to have little in common with the aggressively dehumanizing comic imagery that began to proliferate in magazines\n\u003cbr\u003eand newspapers after the Civil War. Indeed, critics such as Alain Locke hailed realism's potential to accomplish \"the artistic emancipation of the Negro,\" a project that logically extended to other\n\u003cbr\u003egroups systematically misrepresented in the comic imagery of the period. From the influential \"Editor's Study\" at Harper's Monthly, William Dean Howells touted the democratic impulse of realist imagery as an alternative to romanticism's \"pride of caste,\" which is \"averse to the mass of men\" and \"consents to know them only in some conventionalized and artificial guise.\"  Yet if literary realism pursued the interests of democracy by affirming \"the equality of things\n\u003cbr\u003eand the unity of men,\" why did its major practitioners, including Howells himself, regularly employ comic typification as a feature of their representational practice? Critics have often dismissed such\n\u003cbr\u003eapparent lapses in realist practice as blind spots, vestiges of a genteel social consciousness that failed to keep pace with realism's avowed democratic aspirations. Such explanations are useful to a point, but they overlook the fact that the age of realism in American art and letters was simultaneously the great age of ethnic caricature. Henry B. Wonham argues that these two aesthetic programs, one committed to representation of the fully humanized individual, the other invested in broad\n\u003cbr\u003eethnic abstractions, operate less as antithetical choices than as complementary impulses, both of which receive full play within the period's most demanding literary and graphic works. The seemingly\n\u003cbr\u003eanomalous presence of gross ethnic abstractions within works by Howells, Twain, James, Wharton, and Chesnutt hints at realism's vexed and complicated relationship with the caricatured ethnic images that played a central role in late nineteenth-century American thinking about race, identity, and national culture. In illuminating that relationship, Playing the Races offers a fresh understanding of the rich literary discourse conceived at the intersection of the realist and the\n\u003cbr\u003ecaricatured image.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Oxford University Press","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":44156293873902,"sku":"9780195161946","price":215.63,"currency_code":"AUD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0630\/9612\/7726\/products\/9780195161946.jpg?v=1683541953","url":"https:\/\/bookland.com.au\/products\/playing-the-races","provider":"Book Land AU","version":"1.0","type":"link"}