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Radical Ambivalence
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02 June 2020

Few scholars have considered O’Connor’s talent and life with as much depth and breadth as Angela Alaimo O’Donnell, a
Fordham University professor who has written critical examinations of O’Connor’s work and life, and has even channeled
the classic story writer’s voice in poems. O’Donnell’s appreciation for O’Connor makes her the perfect critic to write a necessary, complex book about O’Connor’s views on race. Radical Ambivalence: Race in Flannery O’Connor is a significant, challenging work of criticism.
As the country continues to reel from racial injustice and police brutality, many American find themselves once again questioning their legacy of white privilege and their own complicity in structural racism. Angela Alaimo O'Donnell's new book, Radical Ambivalence: Race in Flannery O'Connor, is a welcome opportunity for readers to grapple with this legacy in the life and work of one of the most talented writers of the 20th century.
Representation of race in O'Connor's fiction has been addressed in articles and book chapters, but Radical Ambivalence is the first book devoted exclusively to the subject.
Any future discussion of O’Connor and race must take Radical Ambivalence as its necessary point of departure.
List of Abbreviations | ix
Introduction: Two Minds | 1
1 “Whiteness Visible”: Critical Whiteness Studies and O’Connor’s Fiction | 13
2 Race, Politics, and the Double Mind: Flannery’s Correspondence versus O’Connor’s Fiction | 36
3 Theology, Religion, and Race: Constant Conversion and the Beginning of Vision | 70
4 “Africanist Presence” and the Role of Black Bodies | 97
5 The Failure and Promise of Communion | 125
Acknowledgments | 145
Works Cited | 149
Index | 155