‘A shriek so terrible!’: Charles Brockden Brown’s Sensational Ventriloquists

H. Murray
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Abstract

Charles Brockden Brown populates his gothic fiction with racially ambiguous characters to ask what constitutes national identity and who can be a citizen at a time when these concepts are shifting, unsettled and still contested. This chapter examines how Brown communicates liminal Whiteness through sensational ventriloquism, which marks marginalised White men as non-White noncitizens along the frontier. Through their unusual vocal abilities, itinerant Frank Carwin in Wieland and cognitively impaired Nick Handyside in ‘Somnambulism’ become less than White figures. Their transgressive cries disturb the senses of White middle class families who serve as prime fictional examples of rational White citizens in the early republic. Written as pieces of irrational yet instructive entertainment, Brown transcribes these disruptive and powerful speech acts within his fiction to test the senses and rationality of his republican heroines and gothic readers.
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“多么可怕的尖叫!”查尔斯·布罗克登·布朗的《耸人听闻的腹语者》
查尔斯·布罗克登·布朗(Charles Brockden Brown)在他的哥特小说中填充了种族模糊的角色,以询问什么构成了国家身份,在这些概念不断变化、不确定、仍有争议的时代,谁能成为公民。本章探讨布朗如何通过煽情的腹语来传达有限的白人,这标志着被边缘化的白人作为非白人非公民沿着边境。通过他们不寻常的发声能力,《维兰》中的巡回演出的弗兰克·卡文和《梦游》中的认知受损的尼克·汉迪赛德变得不如白人人物。他们越界的呼喊扰乱了白人中产阶级家庭的感觉,这些家庭是共和早期理性白人公民的主要虚构例子。作为一种非理性但有教育意义的娱乐,布朗在他的小说中记录了这些破坏性和强大的言语行为,以测试他的共和党女主人公和哥特式读者的理智和理性。
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