Oct 23, 2019 By: yunews

Ishmael Reed鈥檚 Mumbo Jumbo (1972), a rewriting of American history from an African-American viewpoint, was one of the first postmodern historiographic metafictions. Reed鈥檚 text is both a critique of received history and a counterhistory that reimagines American history as an epic struggle pitting the repressive forces of monotheistic Atonism, the 鈥渨hite-washed鈥 history of the U.S. and its white-dominated power structures, against the polytheistic, African-born creative spirit of 鈥淛es Grew鈥 and the Harlem Renaissance it inspires. To create this counterhistory, Reed mixes reproductions of authentic documents, news clippings, and photographs, all potentially functioning as historical 鈥渆vidence,鈥 with apparently invented ones. A few, like a Cotton Club program, are easily identifiable or, like the photograph of Duke Ellington鈥檚 orchestra, glossed in the text. In other cases, such as the uncaptioned photograph of a 1960s Black Panthers march that is embedded in a discussion of a 1920s plot against Jes Grew, readers must deduce (or create) the connection. The identity of many other images, however, remains obscure, as does their relation to the narrative. Reed puts the reader in the position of a historian who attempts to identify artifacts from the past and decide on their interpretation, while contending with conflicting or incommensurable evidence and the impossibility of creating a cohesive history from it all. This paper examines how the text鈥檚 unidentified images compel readers to struggle with the suspect nature of historical evidence and question the reliability of the conflicting historical narratives constructed through it, thus making us confront the indeterminacy鈥攁nd multiplicity鈥攐f history. As a result, there emerges not only a radical questioning of conventional historiographies and the suggestion of alternative ones, but a literary critique of our concepts of history and of the nature of historical truth. A new literary practice requires a new philosophy of history.