《进进出出:白人种族转型与美国哥特想象

IF 0.3 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Humanities (Basel, Switzerland) Pub Date : 2023-11-03 DOI:10.3390/h12060129
Hannah Lauren Murray
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文考察了罗伯特·蒙哥马利·伯德的《谢泼德·李》(1836)和乔丹·皮尔的《逃出绝命镇》(2017)中白人种族转型的哥特式比喻。这些看似完全不同的文本都讲述了白人通过超自然的身体跳跃或实验性手术变成黑人的故事。在这些文本中,黑人充当了白人角色的情感和物质资源,他们通过逃避白人而反常地支持白人。谢泼德·李在战前的专业知识之外鲜为人知,他通过思考为什么白人在早期国家可能被拒绝,增强了我们对哥特式种族的理解。在黑脸诗歌的背景下,小说将向下流动的谢泼德变成了一个被奴役的人,作为经济成功压力的喘息。《逃出绝命族》以其19世纪的先行者为基础,展示了黑人的身体是“后种族”美国白人自我渴望和必要的容器,他们把自己的白人身体变成了黑人,以延长或提高自己的生活,把黑人变成了白人中产阶级文化的延伸和执行者。通过对这些文本的批判性白人研究,本文认为白人的种族转变是美国哥特文学中一个长期存在的传统,它不仅表达了白人的欲望和焦虑,而且在每个特定的历史种族背景下进行了自身的转变。
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Get In and Get Out: White Racial Transformation and the US Gothic Imagination
This article examines the Gothic trope of White racial transformation in Robert Montgomery Bird’s Sheppard Lee (1836) and Jordan Peele’s Get Out (2017). These seemingly disparate texts both feature White men who turn Black via supernatural body hopping or experimental surgery. In these texts, Blackness acts as an emotional and material resource for White characters that perversely bolsters Whiteness by escaping it. Little-known outside of antebellum specialisms, Sheppard Lee enhances our understanding of race in the Gothic by considering why Whiteness may be rejected in the early nation. Written in the context of blackface minstrelsy, the novel transforms downwardly mobile Sheppard into an enslaved man as a respite from the pressures of economic success. Get Out builds on its nineteenth-century precursors by showing the Black body as a desired and necessary vessel for the “post-racial” White American self, who swaps their physical Whiteness for Blackness to extend or enhance their own life, turning Black men into extensions and enforcers of White middle-class culture. In uniting these texts through the lens of critical Whiteness studies, this article argues that White racial transformation is a long-held tradition in the US Gothic that not only expresses White desires and anxieties, but itself transforms in each specific historical racial context.
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