Ain't I an Anthropologist: Zora Neale Hurston Beyond the Literary Icon by Jennifer L. Freeman Marshall (review)

IF 0.8 2区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY JOURNAL OF SOUTHERN HISTORY Pub Date : 2024-07-16 DOI:10.1353/soh.2024.a932595
Steven P. Garabedian
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Freeman Marshall, <em>Ain’t I an Anthropologist: Zora Neale Hurston Beyond the Literary Icon</em>, expands that process <strong>[End Page 645]</strong> of corrective finding to the realm of the social sciences. Freeman Marshall is an associate professor of English at Purdue University, with degrees and affiliations in women’s studies, anthropology, African American studies, and American studies. She brings the full range of her expertise to bear on this reframing of Hurston beyond the lauded, yet ultimately narrowing, status of literary icon and celebrity. Hurston’s intellect inspired inventive scholarship, not just accomplished fiction. Yet the same spirit and dynamism that was celebrated in a canonical work like <em>Their Eyes Were Watching God</em> (1937) occasioned marginalization when it came to major ethnographies from the same period, such as <em>Mules and Men</em> (1935) and <em>Tell My Horse</em> (1938). In the world of literature, Zora Neale Hurston is championed as authoritative, but in the world of anthropology (and its related field of folklore studies), Hurston has been dismissed as non-authoritative. Freeman Marshall highlights how Hurston, the novelist, is revered, and Hurston, the anthropologist, is relegated to novelty.</p> <p>Hurston was a sensation in the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s and 1930s. She was prolific, publishing fiction and nonfiction to wide critical and popular attention. Her achievement was rewarded with private patronage (such as by the white philanthropist Charlotte Osgood Mason) and formal academic support, degrees, and mentorship (Franz Boas at Columbia University). Nevertheless, Hurston remained her own person and took her own intellectual and creative counsel. Freeman Marshall opens with Hurston’s prophetic statement in “How It Feels to Be Colored Me” from 1928: “It is thrilling to think—to know that for any act of mine, I shall get twice as much praise or twice as much blame” (p. 1). Indeed, by the time of her death in 1960, Hurston was living in the South in public obscurity and dire financial straits.</p> <p>There are elements beyond strictly disciplinary conservatism that account for Hurston’s recovery in literature and sidelining in anthropology. Freeman Marshall explicates these dual chronologies and highlights the interplay of forces that elevated Hurston on the literary track and impeded her in the social sciences. It was not simply that Hurston had the fortune of an Alice Walker to prompt a literary resurgence in the 1970s, and that no similar booster of influence stepped up in anthropology. Rather, it is a story beyond that familiar narrative of heroic rediscovery. Freeman Marshall shows that, over time, a multitude of individuals and a constellation of double standards within and outside academia kept Hurston’s scholarship from a fair reading. Social ideologies of race, gender, and class, academic politics, and cultural currents of fashion, favor, and disfavor were and are key.</p> <p>Freeman Marshall’s purview is expansive, ranging from literary history to African American studies to feminist scholarship to folklore and anthropology, but her method is detailed. Each chapter offers close readings of texts and, in some instances, images too. Freeman Marshall is fine-tuned to historiography, but she factors in popular discourse and reception as well. Specialists will find this work of intellectual history incisive and comprehensive; no comparable study assembles such a rigorous inventory of writings about and by Hurston. For generalists, the book will perhaps read as dense, but it should not be overlooked. In its broader import, <em>Ain’t I an Anthropologist</em> resonates with contemporary reassessments in so many spheres of arts, letters, and learning. <strong>[End Page 646]</strong> There were many consigned to the margins (women, people of color, independent scholars, activists) who saw past the conventions of their age, even if they were hardly...</p> </p>","PeriodicalId":45484,"journal":{"name":"JOURNAL OF SOUTHERN HISTORY","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.8000,"publicationDate":"2024-07-16","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"JOURNAL OF SOUTHERN HISTORY","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1353/soh.2024.a932595","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"历史学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"HISTORY","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • Ain’t I an Anthropologist: Zora Neale Hurston Beyond the Literary Icon by Jennifer L. Freeman Marshall
  • Steven P. Garabedian
Ain’t I an Anthropologist: Zora Neale Hurston Beyond the Literary Icon. By Jennifer L. Freeman Marshall. The New Black Studies Series. (Urbana, Chicago, and Springfield: University of Illinois Press, 2023. Pp. xvi, 252. Paper, $27.95, ISBN 978-0-252-08710-3; cloth, $110.00, ISBN 978-0-252- 04496-0.)

Zora Neale Hurston was lost and then found in the U.S. literary canon. This valuable monograph by Jennifer L. Freeman Marshall, Ain’t I an Anthropologist: Zora Neale Hurston Beyond the Literary Icon, expands that process [End Page 645] of corrective finding to the realm of the social sciences. Freeman Marshall is an associate professor of English at Purdue University, with degrees and affiliations in women’s studies, anthropology, African American studies, and American studies. She brings the full range of her expertise to bear on this reframing of Hurston beyond the lauded, yet ultimately narrowing, status of literary icon and celebrity. Hurston’s intellect inspired inventive scholarship, not just accomplished fiction. Yet the same spirit and dynamism that was celebrated in a canonical work like Their Eyes Were Watching God (1937) occasioned marginalization when it came to major ethnographies from the same period, such as Mules and Men (1935) and Tell My Horse (1938). In the world of literature, Zora Neale Hurston is championed as authoritative, but in the world of anthropology (and its related field of folklore studies), Hurston has been dismissed as non-authoritative. Freeman Marshall highlights how Hurston, the novelist, is revered, and Hurston, the anthropologist, is relegated to novelty.

Hurston was a sensation in the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s and 1930s. She was prolific, publishing fiction and nonfiction to wide critical and popular attention. Her achievement was rewarded with private patronage (such as by the white philanthropist Charlotte Osgood Mason) and formal academic support, degrees, and mentorship (Franz Boas at Columbia University). Nevertheless, Hurston remained her own person and took her own intellectual and creative counsel. Freeman Marshall opens with Hurston’s prophetic statement in “How It Feels to Be Colored Me” from 1928: “It is thrilling to think—to know that for any act of mine, I shall get twice as much praise or twice as much blame” (p. 1). Indeed, by the time of her death in 1960, Hurston was living in the South in public obscurity and dire financial straits.

There are elements beyond strictly disciplinary conservatism that account for Hurston’s recovery in literature and sidelining in anthropology. Freeman Marshall explicates these dual chronologies and highlights the interplay of forces that elevated Hurston on the literary track and impeded her in the social sciences. It was not simply that Hurston had the fortune of an Alice Walker to prompt a literary resurgence in the 1970s, and that no similar booster of influence stepped up in anthropology. Rather, it is a story beyond that familiar narrative of heroic rediscovery. Freeman Marshall shows that, over time, a multitude of individuals and a constellation of double standards within and outside academia kept Hurston’s scholarship from a fair reading. Social ideologies of race, gender, and class, academic politics, and cultural currents of fashion, favor, and disfavor were and are key.

Freeman Marshall’s purview is expansive, ranging from literary history to African American studies to feminist scholarship to folklore and anthropology, but her method is detailed. Each chapter offers close readings of texts and, in some instances, images too. Freeman Marshall is fine-tuned to historiography, but she factors in popular discourse and reception as well. Specialists will find this work of intellectual history incisive and comprehensive; no comparable study assembles such a rigorous inventory of writings about and by Hurston. For generalists, the book will perhaps read as dense, but it should not be overlooked. In its broader import, Ain’t I an Anthropologist resonates with contemporary reassessments in so many spheres of arts, letters, and learning. [End Page 646] There were many consigned to the margins (women, people of color, independent scholars, activists) who saw past the conventions of their age, even if they were hardly...

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我不是人类学家吗?詹妮弗-L-弗里曼-马歇尔(Jennifer L. Freeman Marshall)所著的《佐拉-尼尔-赫斯顿超越文学偶像》(评论
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者: 我是不是人类学家?Jennifer L. Freeman Marshall Steven P. Garabedian 著 Ain't I an Anthropologist:超越文学偶像的佐拉-尼尔-赫斯顿。作者:Jennifer L. Freeman Marshall。新黑人研究丛书。(Urbana, Chicago, and Springfield:伊利诺伊大学出版社,2023 年。第 xvi、252 页。纸质版,27.95 美元,ISBN 978-0-252-08710-3;布质版,110.00 美元,ISBN 978-0-252- 04496-0)。佐拉-尼尔-赫斯顿(Zora Neale Hurston)在美国文学史上迷失过,然后又被发现。詹妮弗-L-弗里曼-马歇尔(Jennifer L. Freeman Marshall)的这本珍贵的专著《我是不是人类学家》(Ain't I an Anthropologist:这本由詹妮弗-L. 弗里曼-马歇尔(Jennifer L. Freeman Marshall)撰写的珍贵专著《我是不是人类学家:超越文学偶像的佐拉-尼尔-赫斯顿》将这一纠正性发现过程 [完弗里曼-马歇尔是普渡大学英语系副教授,拥有妇女研究、人类学、非裔美国人研究和美国研究的学位和隶属关系。她运用自己的全部专业知识,对赫斯顿进行了重构,使其超越了文学偶像和名人这一备受赞誉、但最终却日益狭隘的地位。赫斯顿的智慧激发了创造性的学术研究,而不仅仅是成就斐然的小说。然而,在《他们的眼睛在注视着上帝》(1937 年)这样的经典作品中受到赞誉的精神和活力,在同一时期的主要民族志作品中却被边缘化了,如《骡子和人》(1935 年)和《告诉我的马儿》(1938 年)。在文学界,佐拉-尼尔-赫斯顿(Zora Neale Hurston)被奉为权威,但在人类学界(及其相关的民俗研究领域),赫斯顿却被视为非权威。弗里曼-马歇尔(Freeman Marshall)强调了小说家赫斯顿如何受到推崇,而人类学家赫斯顿如何被贬为新奇人物。赫斯顿在二十世纪二三十年代的哈莱姆文艺复兴时期引起轰动。她多产,出版小说和非小说类作品,受到评论界和大众的广泛关注。她的成就得到了私人赞助(如白人慈善家夏洛特-奥斯古德-梅森)和正式的学术支持、学位和导师(哥伦比亚大学的弗朗茨-博厄斯)的奖励。尽管如此,赫斯顿仍然坚持自己的个性,在智力和创作上坚持自己的意见。弗里曼-马歇尔以赫斯顿在 1928 年发表的《作为有色人种的我感觉如何》一文中的预言开篇:"想到我的任何行为都会得到加倍的赞美或加倍的指责,这真是令人激动"(第 1 页)。事实上,1960 年赫斯顿去世时,她生活在南方,默默无闻,经济拮据。除了严格意义上的学科保守主义之外,还有一些因素导致了赫斯顿在文学领域的复苏和在人类学领域的边缘化。弗里曼-马歇尔(Freeman Marshall)阐释了这些双重时序,并强调了各种力量的相互作用,这些力量使赫斯顿在文学领域得到提升,而在社会科学领域却受到阻碍。这不仅仅是因为赫斯顿在 20 世纪 70 年代有幸遇到了爱丽丝-沃克(Alice Walker),促使她在文学领域重新崛起,而人类学领域却没有类似的影响力助推器。相反,这个故事超越了人们熟悉的英雄再发现叙事。弗里曼-马歇尔(Freeman Marshall)指出,随着时间的推移,学术界内外的众多个人和双重标准使得赫斯顿的学术研究无法得到公正的解读。种族、性别和阶级等社会意识形态、学术政治以及时尚、好恶等文化潮流过去是、现在也是关键所在。弗里曼-马歇尔的研究范围很广,从文学史到非裔美国人研究,从女权主义学术研究到民俗学和人类学,但她的研究方法很细致。每一章都对文本进行了细读,在某些情况下还对图像进行了细读。弗里曼-马歇尔精于史学研究,但她也将大众话语和接受纳入其中。专家们会发现这部思想史作品精辟而全面;没有任何同类研究能对有关赫斯顿的著作和赫斯顿的作品进行如此严谨的梳理。对于普通读者来说,这本书可能读起来比较晦涩难懂,但也不容忽视。从更广泛的意义上讲,《难道我不是人类学家》与当代许多艺术、文学和学术领域的重新评估产生了共鸣。[末页 646] 有许多被边缘化的人(女性、有色人种、独立学者、活动家),他们超越了他们那个时代的传统,即使他们很难......
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