Conjugating Hindi

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Product Details
Price
$19.00  $17.67
Publisher
Dalkey Archive Press
Publish Date
Pages
175
Dimensions
5.5 X 8.5 X 0.6 inches | 0.6 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781628972542
BISAC Categories:

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About the Author
Ishmael Reed is the author of over twenty-five books including Mumbo Jumbo, Yellow Back Radio Broke-Down, Conjugating Hindi, Why No Confederate Statues in Mexico and most recently Malcolm and Me and Why the Black Hole Sings the Blues. He is also a publisher, television producer, songwriter, radio and television commentator, lecturer, and has long been devoted to exploring an alternative black aesthetic: the trickster tradition, or Neo-Hoodooism. A regular contributor to CounterPunch and founder of the Before Columbus Foundation, he taught at the University of California, Berkeley for over thirty years, retiring in 2005. Reed is the only person to be nominated for the National Book Award in two categories in the same year.
Reviews
"As a top-flight postmodern novelist and feisty cultural critic, Reed consistently challenges our status quo sociopolitical arrangements."
"His own groundbreaking literary output over six decades, in multiple languages and every form--essays, fiction, poetry, film, even editorial cartoons--has infected a generation of artists."
"Ishmael Reed makes the language boogaloo."
"One of the most inventive and prolific of contemporary American writers . . . Reed's prose style resembles the youthful Ali's ring style. It is unorthodox, brash, yet controlled."
"The only novelist who is a match for the comic intensity of Richard Pryor."
"The novel [Conjugating Hindi] is what some academics have dubbed a trickster text, a text informed by the mischievous, shape-shifting, slippery figure of the trickster, found in folklore throughout the world. Implicit in Reed's formal style, as well as his content, is the trickster disregard for caste of any kind. Heedless of boundaries and resistant to being pinned down or hemmed in, the novel is driven almost entirely by Reed's deep, free-wheeling curiosity about why things are the way they are in regard to the use of the model minority myth against Black communities....As the United States's ideals come under increasing attack, we need more flame-throwers like septuagenarian Ishmael Reed -- more fighters, more tricksters, more eagle-eyed observers with an incendiary spirit, more dazzlingly original artist-writers -- willing to defy what is permissible to say, willing to catch it on all sides, and willing to run over boundaries of all kinds into genuinely new or neglected territory."