This section contains 13,397 words (approx. 45 pages at 300 words per page) |
SOURCE: "Fraternal Blues: John Edgar Wideman's Homewood Trilogy," in Contemporary Literature, Vol. XXXII, No. 3, Fall, 1991, pp. 312-45.
Rushdy is an educator and the author of The Empty Garden: The Subject of Late Milton (1992). In the following essay, he discusses the significance of the narrator gaining his "blues voice" in the Homewood trilogy.
What can purge my heart
Of the song
And the sadness?
What can purge my heart
But the song
Of the sadness?
What can purge my heart
Of the sadness
Of the song?
—Langston Hughes, "Song for Billie Holiday"
In Brothers and Keepers, John Edgar Wideman contemplates the difficulty of representing the Other without reducing the representation to just another form of solipsism. One way to do so, he thought, would be for him to attempt self-reflexively to perceive his desire for access to what might potentially be an occult area of intelligence, while at the...
This section contains 13,397 words (approx. 45 pages at 300 words per page) |