Midwest Modern Language Association Book Prize winner
How does contemporary literature contend with the power and responsibility of authorship, particularly when considering marginalized groups? How have the works of multiethnic authors challenged the notion that writing and authorship are neutral or universal?
In Novel Subjects, Leah Milne offers a new way to look at multicultural literature by focusing on scenes of writing in contemporary works by authors with marginalized identities. These scenes, she argues, establish authorship as a form of radical self-care鈥攁 term we owe to Audre Lorde, who defines self-care as self-preservation and 鈥渁n act of political warfare.鈥
In engaging in this battle, the works discussed in this study confront limitations on ethnicity and nationality wrought by the institutionalization of multiculturalism. They also focus on identities whose mere presence on the cultural landscape is often perceived as vindictive or willful. Analyzing recent texts by Carmen Maria Machado, Louise Erdrich, Ruth Ozeki, Toni Morrison, and more, Milne connects works across cultures and nationalities in search of reasons for this recent trend of depicting writers as characters in multicultural texts. Her exploration uncovers fiction that embrace unacceptable or marginalized modes of storytelling鈥攕uch as plagiarism, historical revisions, jokes, and lies鈥攁s well as inauthentic, invisible, and unexceptional subjects. These works ultimately reveal a shared goal of expanding the borders of belonging in ethnic and cultural groups, and thus add to the ever-evolving conversations surrounding both multicultural literature and self-care.
鈥淢ilne offers a bold intervention in the field of contemporary American literature: a defense of multiculturalism at a time when it seems to have been largely abandoned except in corporate circles. When so much of American political discourse seems to be beholden to a resurgent anti-immigrant ethnonationalism, such a defense is welcome.鈥濃擬in Hyoung Song, author, The Children of 1965: On Writing, and Not Writing, as an Asian American
鈥淭he themes Milne engages are quite important to American literature, contemporary fiction, multiethnic literature, and ethnic studies鈥攖here aren鈥檛 enough works that engage with contemporary ethnic American literature, especially when thinking through issues of narratology and intersectionality. Studies and comparative analyses of this kind are the most innovative in the field and are what students are looking for.鈥濃擩ennifer Ho, coeditor, Narrative, Race, and Ethnicity in the United States
2021 Midwest Modern Language Association Book Award, winner