Games of Property: Law, Race, Gender, and Faulkner's Go Down, MosesDuke University Press, 7. 7. 2003 - 339 strán (strany) In Games of Property, distinguished critic Thadious M. Davis provides a dazzling new interpretation of William Faulkner’s Go Down, Moses. Davis argues that in its unrelenting attention to issues related to the ownership of land and people, Go Down, Moses ranks among Faulkner’s finest and most accomplished works. Bringing together law, social history, game theory, and feminist critiques, she shows that the book is unified by games—fox hunting, gambling with cards and dice, racing—and, like the law, games are rule-dependent forms of social control and commentary. She illuminates the dual focus in Go Down, Moses on property and ownership on the one hand and on masculine sport and social ritual on the other. Games of Property is a masterful contribution to understandings of Faulkner’s fiction and the power and scope of property law. |
Obsah
The Game of Challenge | 43 |
The Object of Property | 77 |
The Game of Boundaries | 119 |
The Subject of Property | 174 |
Conclusion The Game of Compensation | 223 |
Notes | 263 |
Bibliography | 309 |
330 | |
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Časté výrazy a frázy
Absalom African American American Beauchamp become body bondage boundaries Butch C. B. Macpherson Cambridge Caroline Barr Carothers McCaslin Carothers's Chickasaw Civil codes Compson concept construction Court critical race theory cultural daughter death defined discourse domination Dred Scott economic Edmonds Emancipation enslaved erty Essays Eunice father Faulk female fiction freedom gender grandfather Hubert human hunt identity ideology Ike McCaslin Ike's incest inheritance justice labor land ledgers Louisiana State University Lucas male marriage Mary Frances Berry masculine McCaslin miscegenation Molly moral Moses mother narrative Negro nigger novel object of property old Carothers owners ownership person plantation play players political Press of Mississippi property rights race racial reading relations reprint Rowan Oak sexual shame slave slave law slavery social society Sophonsiba South Southern space story Terrel theory Thucydus tion Tomasina Tomey's Turl Turl's Uncle Uncle Buck wife William Faulkner woman Yoknapatawpha York
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