Jack London's Racial Lives: A Critical Biography

Jack London's Racial Lives: A Critical Biography

by Jeanne Campbell Reesman
Jack London's Racial Lives: A Critical Biography

Jack London's Racial Lives: A Critical Biography

by Jeanne Campbell Reesman

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Overview

Jack London (1876-1916), known for his naturalistic and mythic tales, remains among the most popular and influential American writers in the world. Jack London's Racial Lives offers the first full study of the enormously important issue of race in London's life and diverse works, whether set in the Klondike, Hawaii, or the South Seas or during the Russo-Japanese War, the Jack Johnson world heavyweight bouts, or the Mexican Revolution. Jeanne Campbell Reesman explores his choices of genre by analyzing racial content and purpose and judges his literary artistry against a standard of racial tolerance. Although he promoted white superiority in novels and nonfiction, London sharply satirized racism and meaningfully portrayed racial others—most often as protagonists—in his short fiction.

Why the disparity? For London, racial and class identity were intertwined: his formation as an artist began with the mixed "heritage" of his family. His mother taught him racism, but he learned something different from his African American foster mother, Virginia Prentiss. Childhood poverty, shifting racial allegiances, and a "psychology of want" helped construct the many "houses" of race and identity he imagined. Reesman also examines London's socialism, his study of Darwin and Jung, and the illnesses he suffered in the South Seas.

With new readings of The Call of the Wild, Martin Eden, and many other works, such as the explosive Pacific stories, Reesman reveals that London employed many of the same literary tropes of race used by African American writers of his period: the slave narrative, double-consciousness, the tragic mulatto, and ethnic diaspora. Hawaii seemed to inspire his most memorable visions of a common humanity.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780820337814
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Publication date: 03/15/2011
Pages: 440
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.20(d)

About the Author

JEANNE CAMPBELL REESMAN is a professor of English at the University of Texas at San Antonio. She is the author of American Designs: The Late Novels of James and Faulkner and Jack London: A Study of the Short Fiction. Her other books include Trickster Lives and Speaking the Other Self (both Georgia).

JEANNE CAMPBELL REESMAN is a professor of English at the University of Texas at San Antonio. She is the author of American Designs: The Late Novels of James and Faulkner and Jack London: A Study of the Short Fiction. Her other books include Trickster Lives and Speaking the Other Self (both Georgia).

Table of Contents


List of Illustrations, ix
Chronology, xi
Acknowledgments, xv
Introduction, 1
Chapter 1. Jack London and Race, 13
Chapter 2. True North or White Silence? Slave vs. “Zone- Conqueror” in the Klondike, 55
Chapter 3. Marching with the Censor: Jack London, Author! and the Japanese Army, 87
Chapter 4. London and the Postcolonial South Pacific, 107
Chapter 5. Jack London, Jack Johnson, and the “Great White Hope,” 177
Chapter 6. A “‘Good Indian’”? Race as Class in Martin Eden, 207
Chapter 7. “Make Westing” for the Sonoma Dream, 237
Chapter 8. “Mongrels” to “Young Wise Ones”: On the
Mexican Revolution and On the Makaloa Mat, 265
Notes, 307
Bibliography, 353
Index, 373
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