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Lenhardt, Corinna. "African American Gothic Today: Black Tradition and Reiterative Practices". Savage Horrors, Bielefeld: transcript-Verlag, 2020, pp. 203-252. https://doi.org/10.14361/9783839451540-009
Lenhardt, C. (2020). African American Gothic Today: Black Tradition and Reiterative Practices. In Savage Horrors (pp. 203-252). Bielefeld: transcript-Verlag. https://doi.org/10.14361/9783839451540-009
Lenhardt, C. 2020. African American Gothic Today: Black Tradition and Reiterative Practices. Savage Horrors. Bielefeld: transcript-Verlag, pp. 203-252. https://doi.org/10.14361/9783839451540-009
Lenhardt, Corinna. "African American Gothic Today: Black Tradition and Reiterative Practices" In Savage Horrors, 203-252. Bielefeld: transcript-Verlag, 2020. https://doi.org/10.14361/9783839451540-009
Lenhardt C. African American Gothic Today: Black Tradition and Reiterative Practices. In: Savage Horrors. Bielefeld: transcript-Verlag; 2020. p.203-252. https://doi.org/10.14361/9783839451540-009
The American Gothic novel has been deeply shaped by issues of race and raciality from its origins in British Romanticism to the American Gothic novel in the twenty-first century. Savage Horrors delineates an intrinsic raciality that is discursively sedimented in the Gothic's uniquely binary structure. The study uncovers the destructive and lasting impact of the Gothic's anti-Black racism on the cultural discourses in the United States. At the same time, Savage Horrors traces the unflinching Black resistance back to the Gothic's intrinsic raciality. The African American Gothic, however, does not originate there but in the Black Atlantic - roughly a decade before the first Gothic novel was ever written on American soil.