The Detroit Genre

Race, Dispossession, and Resilience in American Literature and Film, 1967-2023

Subjects: Literary Criticism, African American, Performing Arts, History & Criticism
Imprint: Lever Press
Paperback : 9781643150680, 345 pages, 8 black-and-white images, 6 x 9, November 2024
Ebook : 9781643150697, 345 pages, 8 black-and-white images, 6 x 9, November 2024
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The first comprehensive investigation of the literary and popular cultural representations of Detroit
 
 

Description

Detroit has an essential relationship to genre in American literature and popular culture. The contemporary formations of the suburban sitcom, the post-apocalyptic genre, the sci-fi dystopia, crime fiction, the superhero genre, and contemporary horror would not exist in the way they do today without the aesthetic material and racial history of Detroit. When DC Comics wanted to compete with Marvel and market “socially relevant” comics, especially ones dealing with issues of race, they swapped Gotham and Metropolis for Detroit. What about vampires concerned with de-industrialization, heritage conservation, and impending water wars? Must be Detroit. A story about a half-man, half-robot wrestling with what it means to be human by fighting crime? Improbably, Detroit has two. Author Vincent Haddad’s The Detroit Genre provides the first comprehensive literary and cultural investigation of the representations of Detroit in popular and literary culture.
 
The book first establishes the concept of the “Detroit genre” that emerged in late 1960s and traces the tropes of this white-centric narrative genre in popular culture, touching on key texts including Blue Collar, Robocop, The Crow, It Follows, and Barbarian. The second part shows how Black writers, including Alice Randall, adrienne maree brown, Stephen Mack Jones, and Angela Flournoy, reclaimed and revised the Detroit genre and shows how they have un-fixed Detroit narratives of dispossession, criminality, and industrial and social failure through formal experimentations on genre itself.
 
Where Detroit has typically been painted in the news as one of three things—the center of the automotive industry; crime-ridden and in ruins; or as a “blank canvas” with limitless potential of entrepreneurship—Vincent Haddad shows that the Detroit genre in literature and film can be far more powerful than news media in narrating Black dispossession as a pragmatic, even liberal consensus. The texts studied here condition forgetfulness about Detroit’s history or expose it to a full reckoning, direct attention toward or away from the city’s agents of injustice, fetishize resilience or model resistance, and foreclose or imagine a future of Black liberation. Appealing to scholars of popular literature, media, race, and American studies, The Detroit Genre is an accessible and engaging study of the city’s influence on a wide array of genres in pop culture.

Vincent Haddad is an associate professor of English in the Humanities Department at Central State University in Wilberforce, Ohio. His scholarship on literature and popular culture has appeared in the academic journals College Literature, Inks, The Comparatist, ImageTexT, as well as several edited collections.
 

“This is a brilliant, compelling, and vitally important book. It combines careful and insightful readings of literary and cinematic works with a contextual understanding of the social and economic circumstances to which the works both refer and offer expression. It considers, not just the ideological underpinnings of the works being discussed, but also their affective and emotional registers, and the ways in which they manipulate diverse points of view (both of outside and suburban gazes upon Detroit, and those of the city’s actual residents)."

- Steven Shaviro, Wayne State University