Erasure (novel)

Erasure is a 2001 novel by Percival Everett and originally published by UPNE. The novel reacts against the dominant strains of discussion surrounding the publication and criticism of African American literature.

Plot

Erasure is about a writer dealing with death, murder, and growing old. The novel's plot revolves around many things, but is essentially about the consequences of turning one's art into a simple commodity; i.e. giving into market forces. The market force within Erasure mirrors the late-90s reality around how the publishing industry pigeon-holed Black writers, and centered or valued certain experiences [those of the urban poor] over others. Themes around race, class, loyalty to family, sex, the theory of language, the life of canonical western artists, abortion, and sexual identity are also explored as the novel unfolds.

The protagonist, Thelonious "Monk" Ellison, a professor of English literature, is in a rut with his own writing. His agent repeatedly explains to him that publishing houses don't believe his writing to be "black enough". To make matters worse, Ellison experiences this angst, as another book called We's Lives In Da Ghetto by Juanita Mae Jenkins is becoming a national best seller and critical darling. Monk is angered by the success of Jenkins' book, so he composes a satirical response based on Richard Wright's Native Son and Sapphire's novel Push, which he first entitles My Pafology before changing it to Fuck. This novel is published in its entirety within Erasure and creates a meta-narrative that asks the reader about the value and merits of such writing in contrast to the supposedly more erudite text of Erasure.

Structure

Like many Everett novels, Erasure is experimental in structure. Part of the novel's structure involves the multiple embedded narratives, written by the main character Thelonious "Monk" Ellison, including his mock-novel titled My Pafology. The Guardian described as a "skilful, extended parody of ghetto novels such as Sapphire's Push."[1] The novel includes other narrative styles within the larger narrative frame, including an academic paper, personal letters, story ideas, imagined dialogue between fictionalized historical characters, and, in the final section, the end of Erasure as written by Stagg R Leigh, Monk's alter ego.

Criticism

The novel was well received. The Guardian focused on the dark comedy that it represents, describing it as moving towards "bleakest comedy" and "sly work."[1] Ready Steady Book focused more on the novel being "full of anger" about the African American literary establishment, but describes the most redeeming elements of the plot coming from " moving portrait of a son coming to terms with his mother’s life."[2]

gollark: You can set the bird on fire, too.
gollark: But actually focusing it and whatever to make it cut cleanly is hard. Setting the lawn on fire is easy.
gollark: The obvious solution is some sort of laser lawnmower system which just sets the lawn on fire every week or so.
gollark: Those need a lot more active management.
gollark: I mean, yes, other wasteful things exist (... I don't think mowing lawns is a significant one), but that doesn't actually make every instance of waste fine.

References

  1. Pinckney, Darryl (2003-04-18). "Colour bind". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2014-04-25.
  2. Tripney, Natasha (February 5, 2010). "Erasure by Percival Everett". Ready Steady Book.

Further reading

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.