17. Yet Updike in "Redux" was for the first time confronting the non-white world that his earlier fiction had drawn a curtain against.
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Replying to @HeerJeet
18. Out of "Redux" failure, the Rabbit books expand their social field outside Angstrom's personal life and try to encompass America.
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Replying to @HeerJeet
19. In her personal life in 1970s/80s, Updike had to deal with race more directly because a son & daughter both married African immigrants.
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Replying to @HeerJeet
20. So by 1980s Updike literally had an African-American family (in several senses) & had also traveled to Africa, Asia, South America.
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Replying to @HeerJeet
21. Updike's wider engagement with world and changes in family surely fed into The Coup: attempt to see USA through African eyes.
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Replying to @HeerJeet
22. I'd be the last person to describe Updike as racially enlightened.
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Replying to @HeerJeet
23. As
@jonathanshainin usefully reminded me, in both "R. Redux" & "Coup" Updike refers to black man's penis as "whip-like."3 replies 1 retweet 0 likes -
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Replying to @lisanjutras
@lisanjutras@jonathanshainin Lots of facepalm, no question. But interesting because U could write beautifully about his own obliviousness.3 replies 0 retweets 0 likes -
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@lisanjutras Yes, a Maples story. Also about tension between Richard's self-involvement and Joan's civic mindedness.
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