Medea’s (Black) Cast:

J. Williams
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Abstract

In referencing Rena Fraden’s 2001 Imagining Medea: Rhodessa Jones and Theatre for Incarcerated Women and Kevin J. Wetmore, Jr.’s 2013 Black Medea: Adaptations in Modern Plays, I suggest that transposing Euripides’s myth into modern black contexts often endows ancient Greek drama with epistemological primacy, whether seeking the “universal” redemption it has long exemplified, or resisting that primacy through the return to a “past” or “heritage” foreclosed by the catastrophe of racial slavery. My critique is not of the substance of the works these two books showcase, all of which constitute important contributions to theater activism. Rather, I aim to expose the transpositional limits of the figure of Medea, whose racial marking (to which I suggest Euripides hints, whether consciously or not), while signifying as stranger/outsider, is often obscured by a gendered, geographical and/or existential “othering,” rather than recognized as a plight of ontological proportion. As such, a blackened Medea can appear to possess the (structural) capacity afforded by her godly, supra-subject position. But what are the incalculable depths of her subjection and dishonor when her blackening pitches her “being” into an ontological dilemma that neither catharsis, nor the intervention of a deus ex machina can recuperate?
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美狄亚(黑色)演员阵容:
在引用雷娜·弗雷登2001年的《想象美狄亚:罗德萨·琼斯和被监禁妇女剧院》和小凯文·J·韦特摩尔2013年的《黑色美狄亚》:现代戏剧中的改编时,我认为,将欧里庇得斯的神话转移到现代黑人语境中,往往赋予古希腊戏剧认识论的首要地位,无论是寻求它长期以来所体现的“普遍”救赎,或者通过回归因种族奴隶制灾难而丧失赎回权的“过去”或“遗产”来抵制这种首要地位。我的批评并不是这两本书所展示的作品的实质,所有这些都是对戏剧激进主义的重要贡献。相反,我的目的是揭露美狄亚形象的转置限制,美狄亚的种族标记(我认为欧里庇得斯暗示了这一点,无论是否有意识),虽然象征着陌生人/局外人,但往往被性别化、地理化和/或存在主义的“他者”所掩盖,而不是被认为是本体论比例的困境。因此,一个黑化的美狄亚似乎拥有她神圣的超主体地位所提供的(结构)能力。但是,当她的黑化使她的“存在”陷入本体论困境时,她的服从和耻辱的深度是不可估量的,无论是宣泄还是双重阴谋的干预都无法恢复?
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期刊介绍: Pacific Coast Philology publishes peer-reviewed essays of interest to scholars in the classical and modern languages, literatures, and cultures. The journal publishes two annual issues (one regular and one special issue), which normally contain articles and book reviews, as well as the presidential address, forum, and plenary speech from the preceding year''s conference. Pacific Coast Philology is the official journal of the Pacific Ancient and Modern Language Association, a regional branch of the Modern Language Association. PAMLA is dedicated to the advancement and diffusion of knowledge of ancient and modern languages and literatures. Anyone interested in languages and literary studies may become a member. Please visit their website for more information.
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