Marylin

About The Book

<b>Offers a European view of racial attitudes in the US during the era of the Harlem Renaissance and Jim Crow with relevance to today's Black Lives Matter and #MeToo movements.</b><br><br><i>Marylin</i> a novel by the Austrian writer Arthur Rundt about a mixed-race woman passing as white moves from Chicago to New York City and concludes tragically on a Caribbean island. First published in 1928 and now translated into English it offers a European view of racial attitudes in the US during the era of the Harlem Renaissance and Jim Crow. Rundt's short but powerful novel touches several vital issues in society today engaging each in a way that prompts further examination and cross-fertilization. First it sheds historical light on what has become painfully obvious in the Black Lives Matter era (if it wasn't before): the continued injustice experienced by Blacks in America as an effect of structural racism. Second it confronts issues of migration and hybrid identities. Third it has relevance for Women's Studies through the title character's interaction with the patriarchy. Through these connections it responds to a growing current in German Studies concerned with diversity and inclusion and integrating the discipline into the broader humanities. An introduction and an afterword both of them extensive and scholarly contextualize the novel in its time and as it relates to ours.
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