Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Haley, Alex (Vol. 12) - Arnold Rampersad
Haley, Alex (Vol. 12) - Arnold Rampersad
ARNOLD RAMPERSAD
A narrative history of the family from the birth of Kunta Kinte to the maturity of Haley himself, Roots is a hybrid work. It links the detective skills of a superior investigative reporter to the powers of a would-be fiction writer, and the product is a work of extremely uneven texture but unquestionable final success. (p. 23)
Haley's search for his ancestors is not conducted to discover unvarnished truth but rather, from one perspective, to justify the history of blacks in America—as if that history needed justification. There is a dominant angle of vision in Roots; almost the entire story is seen from the vantage point of a belief in the necessity of social and political justice, which is the principal romantic illusion to inform the text. From an artistic and intellectual point of view there is what may be for some readers a fateful shift of emphasis from the pathos and ingenuity of the author's search for his family toward...
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- Introduction
- Robert Penn Warren
- Nat Hentoff
- COLIN MacINNES
- Carol Ohmann
- Warner Berthoff
- Michael G. Cooke
- David Herbert Donald
- Arnold Rampersad
- Russell Warren Howe
- Dale Norton
- Adam David Miller
- Ali A. Mazrui
- Carole Meritt
- Nancy L. Arnez
- Howard F. Stein
- Michael G. Cooke
- Dillibe Onyeama
- Arthur Unger
- James Wolcott
- Janet Maslin
- Michael J. Arlen
- Copyright
