Lost in the City Cover
1 2019-02-25T10:06:54+00:00 Daniel G. Tracy e4d2055c1ec04bf92575642aae6698bc52f8f12a 11 3 The cover for the book, showing a geocoded map of Washington, DC superimposed by a portrait of Edward P. Jones. plain 2019-02-25T13:28:35+00:00 Image of Edward P. Jones used in this cover is used by permission of Howard County Library System (MD). Daniel G. Tracy e4d2055c1ec04bf92575642aae6698bc52f8f12aThis page is referenced by:
-
1
2019-02-15T16:33:34+00:00
About this Book
16
Citation and Copyright Information
plain
2019-02-25T10:11:27+00:00
Lost in the City: An Exploration of Edward P. Jones's Short Fiction
Edited by Kenton Rambsy and Peace Ossom-Williamson
Published by Publishing Without Walls (PWW), Urbana, Ill., part of the Illinois Open Publishing Network. Published as part of the AFRO Publishing Without Walls (AFRO-PWW) series. PWW is a collaborative project at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, that involves the University Library, the School of Information Sciences, the Illinois Program for Research in the Humanities, and the Department of African American Studies.
ISBN 9781946011046.
Please cite this book using the DOI 10.21900/pww.10.Synopsis
Merging the best of distant and close reading, Kenton Rambsy and Peace Ossom-Williamson lead a stunning digital investigation of space and narrative in the short fiction of Edward P. Jones. This edited collection contains essays from graduate students enrolled in a graduate literature seminar at the University of Texas at Arlington. Collectively, they examine Jones’s practice of “literary geo-tagging” to show how this master of literary prose delves into a remembered Washington, DC where the city’s African American population finds itself at the precipice of the gentrification and displacement that would lead to today’s very different city. Caught in this moment, the characters negotiate regional identities and generational conflicts. Exploring Jones’s fiction from Lost in the City and All Aunt Hagar’s Children, the authors of this collection’s investigations employ mapping and data visualization methods that make novel contributions to critical methods for literary study even as they establish how Jones embeds DC’s geography in his texts.Technical Note
This book is optimized to be viewed on a desktop computer.Copyright
Lost in the City copyright © 2019 editorial matter by Kenton Rambsy and Peace Ossom-Williamson; individual chapter copyrights by the contributors.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License, except as otherwise indicated.