No Race, No Country

The Politics and Poetics of Richard Wright

By Deborah Mutnick

No Race, No Country

Approx. 304 pp., 6.125 x 9.25, 4 halftones

  • Paperback ISBN: 978-1-4696-8549-6
    Published: May 2025
  • Hardcover ISBN: 978-1-4696-8548-9
    Published: May 2025

Paperback Available May 2025, but pre-order your copy today!

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No Race, No Country presents a major reconsideration of the breakthrough African American author Richard Wright’s work and life. It challenges standard evaluations of his reputation as an autodidact, his late novels, his travel books, and his political commitments after he left the Communist Party USA. Deborah Mutnick engages a wide range of Wright's work throughout his career, providing a nuanced perspective on his complicated gender politics and his serious engagement with Marx's notions of historical materialism, alienation, and commodity fetishism. Adding to a small but growing number of studies of his ecological consciousness, it also examines both his closeness to nature, especially during his youth and late in life, and his early mapping of a racial geography of the "second nature" of the sociocultural world that overlaps with and transforms the natural world. Finally, it joins a recent surge in scholarship on Wright's later nonfiction as a progenitor of Black radical internationalism in the 1960s and 1970s.

About the Author

Deborah Mutnick is professor of English at Long Island University.
For more information about Deborah Mutnick, visit the Author Page.

Reviews

"Deborah Mutnick has done a masterly job of buttressing recent revisionist scholarship on Wright through her use of new archival material."—Bill V. Mullen, author of James Baldwin: Living in Fire

"This much-needed book makes a number of impressive contributions. It is certainly the best reading of Wright's novel The Man Who Lived Underground and the haikus he produced late in his life. In short, I rate this as one of the very best projects on Richard Wright I have ever read."—James Smethurst, author of Behold the Land: The Black Arts Movement in the South