Wolfenstein, Talking Books, Eugene Victor Wolfenstein, Toni Morrison


Wolfenstein worked in the critical theory tradition, with a focus on African American culture and social movements. In his book The Victims of Democracy: Malcolm X and the Black Revolution, he used a theory of the interaction between social classes and psychological groups to analyze white racism and the black liberation struggle. He developed a more general version of this theory in Psychoanalytic-Marxism: Groundwork (1983) and refined it further through engagement with Nietzsche's philosophy in Inside/Outside Nietzsche: Psychoanalytic Explorations (2000). These later works add a concern with gender identity to the earlier agenda. His research is in the area of African-American narrative. A Gift of the Spirit: Reading THE SOULS OF BLACK FOLK (2007) offered a sustained reconstruction of W. E. B. Du Bois's canonical text. He was a professor at UCLA. At the undergraduate level, he taught the lower division Introduction to Political Theory, along with Ancient Political Theory, African-American Freedom Narratives, Malcolm X and Black Liberation, Marxist Political Theory, and an occasional seminar on Platonic Dialectic and Spiritual Liberation. At the graduate level, he focused on major works of Du Bois, Foucault, Freud, Hegel, Marx, and Nietzsche, along with the related critical literatures.His main interests were History of Political Theory, Psychoanalytic Theory and Practice, Critical Theory, Critical Race Theory and Feminist Theory.


 

In his final work, Professor E. Victor Wolfenstein constructs a meta-narrative around the concept of Mother-Right, the Law of the Father, and boundary-transgression. Demonstrating his command of broad time periods and types of thought, Wolfenstein ranges from Sophocles and Plato to Freud, Marx, and W.E.B. Du Bois to explore narrative and intersectionality in three works by Toni Morrison: Tar Baby, Beloved, and Jazz. In the process, Wolfenstein preserves the textual structure, and offers interpretations of the characters, themes, etc., of each text. In his words: "My hope is that all these narrative lines interpenetrate so that, in the end, one story has been told."

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Talking Books: Toni Morrison Among the Ancestors
Eugene Victor Wolfenstein
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