The Cambridge Companion to John Updike 2006
DOI: 10.1017/ccol0521845327.006
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Updike, race, and the postcolonial project

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“…Tellingly, Updike has represented blackness most substantially outside America, and he has represented it in antithesis to whiteness" (p. 579). In another essay, "Updike, Race, and the Postcolonial Project", Prosser (2006) also assumes that "blackness for Updike stands as the other, love or hatred, guilt or fear, a measure of white American consciousness" (p. 76), implying that every positive characteristic of white masculinity is defined against an equally negative aspect in Updike's black characters he utilizes in such works.…”
Section: Abuse Of Sources: African Fantasymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Tellingly, Updike has represented blackness most substantially outside America, and he has represented it in antithesis to whiteness" (p. 579). In another essay, "Updike, Race, and the Postcolonial Project", Prosser (2006) also assumes that "blackness for Updike stands as the other, love or hatred, guilt or fear, a measure of white American consciousness" (p. 76), implying that every positive characteristic of white masculinity is defined against an equally negative aspect in Updike's black characters he utilizes in such works.…”
Section: Abuse Of Sources: African Fantasymentioning
confidence: 99%