In
Relative Races, Brigitte Fielder enriches our understanding of the cultural landscape of the long nineteenth century. Demonstrating boldness, analytical clarity, and scholarly creativity, Fielder gives us language for the processes of racialization that clearly shape American realities but that we have often failed to name because we lacked a theoretical framework. -- Koritha Mitchell, author of * From Slave Cabins to the White House: Homemade Citizenship in African American Culture *
Brigitte Fielder makes the bold claim that racialization entails neither the annihilation of kin ties nor the simple linearity of descent. Instead, race, and blackness in particular, travels unpredictably, transferred from skin to skin, from child to mother, across literary genres, through adoption, via residency, and through sibling relations. In essence, Fielder retheorizes race as the making and breaking of kin ties. After
Relative Races, we will not be able to think about race and racialization, kinship, and queer theories of temporality separately again. -- Elizabeth Freeman, author of * Beside You in Time: Sense Methods and Queer Sociabilities in the American Nineteenth Century *
Brigitte Fielders Relative Races is a sophisticated addition to ongoing discussions of race, kinship, and community.... Fielders rereadings of historical episodes of kinship in domestic spaces in the 19th century urge us to revisit the archives, and shed light on stories that have been erased and ignored."
-- Mary Rambaran-Olm * Public Books *
Brigitte Fielders
Relative Races expertly navigates new discussions centering on nineteenth-century representations of racialization in the United States. . . . Fielders work has broad-reaching effects and implications for the twenty-first century and beyond. -- Tabitha Lowery * Early American Literature *
In her reconsiderations of kinship and racialization, Fielder brilliantly constellates important critical emphases central to recent interventions in queer theory . . . and Native studies. . . . Fielders work is both a call and an itinerarya praxis and a mapfor productively unsettling normative relations in the U.S. -- Shelby Johnson * ABO *
[
Relative Races] is a text that embodies its arguments about excessive and attenuated kindship ties under slavery, the circulation of ideas about racialization, and the many paths of racialized kinship. . . . This important new book of literary history illustrates alternative genealogies and possible futures to combat anti-Black racism. -- Jolie A. Sheffer * American Literary History *