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FATHERALONG : A Meditation on Fathers and Sons, Race and Society |
List Price: $21.00
Your Price: $21.00 |
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Product Info |
Reviews |
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Rating: Summary: Read this book Review: Being a South African i see the effects that the ideology of race has had every day. Yet Fatheralong took my breath away and left me feeling very sad and ashamed but not without hope for the future. Widemans' use of prose is both eloquent and angry, which is also reflected in the structure of the novel. Short bursts of anger are alternated with more lengthy contemplative passages. The flow in prose (and the lack of distinction between him and his father) creates the impression that now, once Wideman is a father himself, he and his father have become one. The seperation that once existed is now erased and the bond between father and son can be mended. But race is not the only issue that gets tackled here. Like Susan Faludi, Wideman is also talking about a generation of men who had fathers who weren't so much absent as silent.
Rating: Summary: A poetic, thoughtful, confrontational and heartfelt book Review: I am astounded by how many of the present reviews here state that this book dwells too long on race. They seem to miss the point. It is all about race and how that is interpreted within American society. Race as it relates to power, power of white over black. Its history continues to have huge resonance within the society to this day. Fatheralong dwells on the impact of racism felt within the fabric of African American families - particularly focusing on how it translates from father to son. A subject that is not happy or pretty, but is conveyed in a poetic, thoughtful, confrontational and heartfelt way. Nothing will change unless people grapple with the enormous fallout of racism. This book is essential reading for anyone who wishes to understand the dynamics of racism.
Rating: Summary: I thought the book was very confusing. Review: I thought the book was very confusing but I liked the way it protrayed the father-son relationship. I thought that Wideman used many stereotypes of whites in the south that he really didn't need to write about. overall the book was decent but it seemed to jump around a little too much for me.
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