令人震惊的疗法:在拉尔夫-埃里森的《工厂医院》中叙述种族主义对心理生物学的伤害

IF 0.6 3区 文学 0 LITERATURE, AMERICAN AMERICAN LITERATURE Pub Date : 2024-03-07 DOI:10.1215/00029831-11218886
Cera Smith
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文认真研究了拉尔夫-埃里森对交感神经系统的兴趣以及他对黑人医院运动的参与,论证了主人公在《隐形人》工厂医院场景中的痛苦是如何影响叙述者在小说框架叙述中的写作 "选择 "的。关于这部小说的学术研究深入探讨了主人公隐身的特例,但却经常忽视他的肉体存在。隐形人 "所经历的社会隐形,不是一种隐喻,而是通过种族化暴力引发的一种体现性的躯体状态。这篇文章从心理生物学的角度对工厂医院的场景进行了细致解读,以探究黑人主人公体现性生活的潜在可能性。在这一场景中,种族主义医生通过电击酷刑伤害了主人公的大脑,破坏了他的认知和交感神经系统。然而,主人公因种族主义伤害而在肉体上发展出的新意识却产生了意想不到的后果;他那富有弹性的大脑描绘出了新的思维路径,通过情感上的自我意识破坏了对他的统治。本文认为,主人公在脑损伤后所写的病人叙事是对医生种族化机器的一种反技术。
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Shocking Therapy: Narrating Racism’s Psychobiological Injuries in Ralph Ellison’s Factory Hospital
Taking seriously Ralph Ellison’s interest in the sympathetic nervous system and his involvement in the Black hospital movement, this article demonstrates how the protagonist’s pain in Invisible Man’s factory hospital scene influences the narrator’s writerly “choices” in the novel’s frame narrative. Scholarship on the novel thoroughly attends to the trope of the protagonist’s invisibility but regularly overlooks his corporeal presence. Invisible Man experiences social invisibility, not as a metaphor but as an embodied, somatic state initiated through racializing violence. This essay offers a psychobiologically attentive reading of the factory hospital scene to investigate the potentialities of the Black protagonist’s embodied living. In the scene, racist doctors injure the protagonist’s brain through electroshock torture, disrupting his cognition and sympathetic nervous system. However, the protagonist’s corporeal development of a new consciousness through racist injury has unintended consequences; his resilient brain charts new pathways of thought, undermining his domination through emotional self-awareness. This essay argues that the protagonist’s patient narrative—written following brain injury—functions as a countertechnology to the doctors’ racializing machine.
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来源期刊
AMERICAN LITERATURE
AMERICAN LITERATURE LITERATURE, AMERICAN-
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
20.00%
发文量
27
期刊介绍: American Literature has been regarded since its inception as the preeminent periodical in its field. Each issue contains articles covering the works of several American authors—from colonial to contemporary—as well as an extensive book review section; a “Brief Mention” section offering citations of new editions and reprints, collections, anthologies, and other professional books; and an “Announcements” section that keeps readers up-to-date on prizes, competitions, conferences, grants, and publishing opportunities.
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