Book Description
Kimberly Drake directs the writing program and reaches writing and American literature and culture at Scripps College. She received her bachelor's degree and her PhD in English at the University of California, Berkeley, where she focused on nineteenth- and twentieth-century protest fiction by African American and proletarian authors as well as feminist theory and black feminist theory. Her recently published book Subjectivity in the American Protest Novel (2011) concerns trauma theory, double consciousness, and topological const ructions of identity in protest novels by Richard Wright, Ann Petry Chester Himes, Tillie Olsen, and Sarah Wright. She is editing a collection of women's writing about cooking in prison and conducting research for a monograph on social determinism and alternative portrayals of intellectual authority in the American detective novel (Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Rudolph Fisher, William Faulkner, Richard Wright, Chester Himes, Walter Mosely, and Lucha Corpi). Her scholarship includes publications and presentations on the fiction of Richard Wright, Toni Morrison, and Ann Petty; on prison narrative; on the slave narratives of Frederick Douglass and Harriet Jacobs; on trauma theory and detective novels; and on punk rock music and memoir. Among the essays in this volume: "Brutish Behavior: Joseph Conrad, Mark Twain, and Anticolonial Protests, 1899-1905" by Jeremiah Garsha, "Nella Larsen and Langston Hughes: Modernist Protest in the Harlem Renaissance" by Kimberly Drake "Dystopia as Protest: Zamyatins We and Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four" by Rachel Stauffer Book jacket.