Cross-Cultural Visions in African American Literature pp 157-175| Cite as
Ishmael Reed’s Mumbo Jumbo through Confucianism
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Yupei Zhou
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Abstract
Ishmael Reed’s Mumbo Jumbo has been widely accepted as a postmodern novel. Most critics define the novel as postmodern on the basis that it is, both formally and thematically, a postmodern deconstruction of modern epistemology and politics and that it offers and experiments with artistic forms and epistemological paradigms alternative to the modern categorization of African American art and African Americans as the other. For most critics, the formal implies, explicates, expresses, or mediates the epistemological. The formal and the epistemological constitute a multicultural as well as oppositional discourse. As W. Lawrence Hogue states, “deconstructing the novel becomes a metaphor for deconstructing metaphysics” for Reed (“Postmodernism” 182). Hogue’s discussion of Mumbo Jumbo’s paradigm of postmodern epistemology takes the formal as his analytic framework. Likewise, Henry Louis Gates, Jr. points out that Mumbo Jumbo, by way of such formal strategies as pastiche, parody, doubling, and signifying, not only revises the Western idea of writing and reading but also critiques “the notions of closure” that are both obvious in Western metaphysics and “implicit in the key texts of the Afro-American canon” (226–27).
https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1057%2F9780230119123_8
Keywords African American Study Critical Stance Binary Opposition Dialectic Relationship Supernatural Power
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Bezner, Kevin, and Ishmael Reed. “An Interview with Ishmael Reed.” Mississippi Review 20, 1/2 (1991): 110–19.Google Scholar
Chan, Joseph. “Moral Autonomy, Civil Liberties, and Confucianism.” Philosophy East and West 52, 3 (2002): 281–310.CrossRef Google Scholar
Dallmayr, Fred. “Tradition, Modernity, and Confucianism.” Human Studies 16, 1/2 (1993): 203–11.CrossRef Google Scholar
Derrida, Jacques. Of Grammatology. Trans. Gayatri Spivak. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 1976.Google Scholar
Dubey, Madhu. “Contemporary African American Fiction and the Politics of Postmodernism.” NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction 35, 2/3 (2002): 151–68.CrossRef Google Scholar
Gates, Henry Louis, Jr. The Signifying Monkey: A Theory of Afro-American Literary Criticism. New York: Oxford UP, 1988.Google Scholar
Hall, David L., and Roger T. Ames. Thinking Through Confucius. Albany: State U of New York P, 1987.Google Scholar
Hanchard, Michael George. “Black Transnationalism, Africana Studies, and the 21st Century.” Journal of Black Studies 35, 2 (2004): 139–53.CrossRef Google Scholar
Hoffman, Donald L. “A Darker Shade of Grail: Questing at the Crossroads in Ishmael Reed’s MumboJumbo.” Callaloo 17, 4 (1994): 1245–56.CrossRef Google Scholar
Hogue, W. Lawrence. “Postmodernism, Traditional Cultural Forms, and the African American Narrative: Major’s Reflex, Morrison’s Jazz, and Reed’s Mumbo Jumbo.” Novel: A Forum on Fiction 35, 2/3 (2002): 169–92.CrossRef Google Scholar
Hogue, W. Lawrence. Postmodern American Literature and Its Other. Urbana: U of Illinois P, 2009.Google Scholar
Jensen, Lionel M. Manufacturing Confucianism: Chinese Traditions and Universal Civilization. Durham, NC: Duke UP, 1997.Google Scholar
Jessee, Sharon. “Ishmael Reed’s Multi-Culture: The Production of Cultural Perspective.” MELUS 13, 3/4 (1986): 5–14.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lock, Helen. “‘A Man’s Story Is His Gris-gris’: Ishmael Reed’s Neo-Voodoo Aesthetic and African-American Tradition.” South Central Review 10, 1 (1993: 67–77).CrossRef Google Scholar
McKay, Nellie Y. “Guest Column: Naming the Problem That Led to the Question ‘Who Shall Teach African American Literature?’; Or, Are We Ready to Disband the Wheatley Court?” PMLA 113, 3 (1998): 359–69.Google Scholar
Pauer-Studer, Herlinde. “Contractualism and What We Owe to Each Other.” Constructions of Practical Reason: Interviews on Moral and Political Philosophy. Stanford: Stanford UP, 2002. 70–89Google Scholar
Reed, Ishmael. Mumbo Jumbo. New York: Atheneum, 1972.Google Scholar
Scanlon, Thomas M. What We Owe to Each Other. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP, 1998.Google Scholar
Swope, Richard. “Crossing Western Space, or the HooDoo Detective on the Boundary in Ishmael Reed’s Mumbo Jumbo.” African American Review 36, 4 (2002): 611–28.CrossRef Google Scholar
Weber, Max. The Religion of China: Confucianism and Taoism. Trans. and Ed. Hans H. Gerth. Glencoe, IL: Free Press, 1951.Google Scholar
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