《黑人的生活,白人的见证:阿芙拉·贝恩《奥鲁诺科》现代主义教学方法的论证》

Sharon Smith
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摘要

本文概述了一种现代主义的方法来教授阿芙拉·贝恩(Aphra Behn)的《奥罗诺科》(Oroonoko, 1688),其中一名白人妇女目睹了一名黑人男子在奴隶手中被残忍地处决。这种方法探索了贝恩小说的能力——学者们经常认为殖民主义叙事令人不安或沮丧——引发了关于“白人见证”的讨论,特别是白人对处于危险中的黑人形象的消费。这包括最近黑人被警察或白人公民义务警员杀害的视频。许多黑人认为这些视频给他们带来了精神创伤,经常指出这些视频未能推动结构性改革。在这篇文章中描述的课堂讨论中,主要关注的是白人目击者对种族主义暴力图像的同情,这种感觉可以给白人目击者带来安慰,甚至是愉悦,但这种感觉本身几乎没有什么作用,如果有的话,解决这种暴力的系统性原因,实际上可能有助于维持暴力。除了考虑教师如何从过去的这部小说中汲取灵感,引发对当前关键问题的讨论外,本文还描述了他们如何将奥罗诺科与不同时期、地点和流派的文本进行对话,以揭示贝恩叙事的局限性并填补其空白。
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Black Lives, White Witnesses: An Argument for a Presentist Approach to Teaching Aphra Behn's Oroonoko
This essay outlines a presentist approach to teaching Aphra Behn’s Oroonoko (1688), in which a white woman witnesses a Black man’s brutal execution at the hands of enslavers. This approach explores the capacity of Behn’s novel—a colonialist narrative scholars frequently identify as troubling or frustrating—to generate discussions about “white witnessing,” particularly white people’s consumption of images of Black people in peril. This includes recent videos of Black people killed by police or white citizen vigilantes. Many Black individuals identify these videos as traumatizing, frequently noting how they have failed to spur structural reform. Of central concern in the classroom discussion described in the essay is the sympathy white witnesses experience in response to images of racist violence, a feeling that can bring reassurance—even pleasure—to the white witness but that in and of itself does little, if anything, to address the systemic causes of such violence and may actually serve to sustain them. In addition to considering how instructors can draw upon this novel from the past to generate discussions about critical issues of the present, the essay describes how they might place Oroonoko in conversation with texts from diverse periods, places, and genres in order to expose the limitations of and fill the gaps in Behn’s narrative.
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