Force-Feeding: Consumption and Sexuality in Frank G. Paci's Black Madonna

Shelby Paulgaard
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Abstract

Informed by calls to re-evaluate the relationship between Canadian literature and power in the wake of Canada’s sesquicentennial, this paper examines Frank G. Paci’s Black Madonna, a 1982 Italian-Canadian novel that played a significant role in early discussions of Canadian multiculturalism. This paper reassesses Paci’s representation of the protagonist Marie, a second-generation Italian-Canadian woman. Using Judith Butler’s concept of the construction of the gendered body and Julia Kristeva’s theory of abjection, this paper analyzes Marie’s struggle for bodily control and her rejection of her Italian mother’s ideals about food, sexuality, and family. Through applying this framework of gender performativity and abjection of Otherness, this paper argues that Marie’s disordered relationships with food and her sexuality are a result of the pressure on second-generation female immigrants to perform cultural identity while simultaneously assimilating into Anglo-Canadian culture. I contend that Marie’s rape fantasies and sexually transgressive encounters are indicative of the corporeal tensions faced by female immigrants in Canada, while her bulimic abjection of Italian food acts as a physical manifestation of the abjection of immigrant cultures by both Canadian multiculturalism and second generation immigrants within multiculturalism. This reassessment of Black Madonna provides a framework for re-reading early multicultural texts through a more nuanced understanding of the relationship between multiculturalism, gender, sexuality, food, and trauma.
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弗兰克·g·帕西的《黑色圣母》中的强迫喂食:消费与性
在加拿大建国150周年之际,人们呼吁重新评估加拿大文学与权力之间的关系,本文考察了弗兰克·g·帕西的《黑色圣母》,这部1982年意大利裔加拿大人创作的小说在加拿大多元文化主义的早期讨论中发挥了重要作用。本文重新评估了帕西对主人公玛丽的表现,她是一位第二代意大利裔加拿大女性。本文运用朱迪思·巴特勒的性别化身体建构概念和茱莉亚·克里斯蒂娃的堕落理论,分析了玛丽对身体控制的斗争,以及她对意大利母亲关于食物、性和家庭的理想的拒绝。本文运用性别表演性和他者性的贬抑这一框架,认为玛丽与食物和性的无序关系是第二代女性移民在融入英加文化的同时表现文化身份的压力的结果。我认为,玛丽的强奸幻想和性侵犯的遭遇表明了加拿大女性移民所面临的身体紧张,而她对意大利食物的暴饮暴食是加拿大多元文化主义和多元文化主义中的第二代移民对移民文化的蔑视的身体表现。通过对多元文化、性别、性、食物和创伤之间关系的更细致的理解,对《黑色圣母》的重新评估为重新阅读早期多元文化文本提供了一个框架。
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