Sonorous Passages
Black Maternal Soundings and the Liberation Imaginary
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Pages: 296
Release Date: October 27, 2026
Author: Meina Yates-Richard
Subjects
African American Studies and Black Diaspora, Gender and Sexuality > Feminism and Women’s Studies, American Studies
African American Studies and Black Diaspora, Gender and Sexuality > Feminism and Women’s Studies, American Studies
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Price: $29.95
This title will be released on October 27, 2026
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Author/Editor Bios
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Meina Yates-Richard is Assistant Professor of African American Studies and English at Emory University.
Table Of Contents
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Prologue: I Sound My Grandmother’s Voice, Listening for Freedom ix
Introduction. Listening for Black Maternal Sonority 1
1. “Your [Memphis] Blues Ain't Like Mine”: Lynching, Maternal Sonority, and the Echoing South 13
Partita: Songs of the Native Son: Fugitive Freedom Impulses and Emergent Black Maternal Sonority 33
Soprano Obligato: Pauline Hopkins’s of One Blood and Black Maternal Sonority 48
2. “WHAT IS YOUR MOTHER’S NAME?”: Maternal Disavowal, Flight, and the Reverberating Aesthetic of Black Maternal Pain 56
3. Sounding Ephemeral Freedoms: Hearing, Not Heeding Black Women’s Cries in Junot Díaz’s The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao 95
4. Inherited Soundscapes: Michelle Cliff’s Marketwomen and Double-Listening for Black Maternal Resonances 119
5. “Across Distances Without Recognition”: Black Maternal Sonority in Toni Morrison’s A Mercy and Aimé Césaire’s Notebook of a Return to the Native Land 146
Coda. “Music of Future Worlds”: Re-Sounding Freedom 184
Acknowledgments 203
Notes 207
Bibliography 253
Index
Introduction. Listening for Black Maternal Sonority 1
1. “Your [Memphis] Blues Ain't Like Mine”: Lynching, Maternal Sonority, and the Echoing South 13
Partita: Songs of the Native Son: Fugitive Freedom Impulses and Emergent Black Maternal Sonority 33
Soprano Obligato: Pauline Hopkins’s of One Blood and Black Maternal Sonority 48
2. “WHAT IS YOUR MOTHER’S NAME?”: Maternal Disavowal, Flight, and the Reverberating Aesthetic of Black Maternal Pain 56
3. Sounding Ephemeral Freedoms: Hearing, Not Heeding Black Women’s Cries in Junot Díaz’s The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao 95
4. Inherited Soundscapes: Michelle Cliff’s Marketwomen and Double-Listening for Black Maternal Resonances 119
5. “Across Distances Without Recognition”: Black Maternal Sonority in Toni Morrison’s A Mercy and Aimé Césaire’s Notebook of a Return to the Native Land 146
Coda. “Music of Future Worlds”: Re-Sounding Freedom 184
Acknowledgments 203
Notes 207
Bibliography 253
Index
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Paper ISBN:
978-1-4780-3917-4 /
Hardcover ISBN:
978-1-4780-3424-7 /
eISBN:
978-1-4780-6281-3 /