‘Race’ and Realism: Vision, Textuality, and Charles Chesnutt’s The Marrow of Tradition
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Katja Kanzler
Abstract
In this article, I read Charles Chesnutt’s The Marrow of Tradition (1901) against the background of realism to unravel the novel’s distinct critique of racial discourse. I argue that realism’s characteristic technique of appealing to the visible to establish the reality and realness of its fictions enables the novel to trace a similar operation in the discourse of race. My focus rests on the novel’s treatment of two pairs of characters that challenge the visual confidence of both realism and race, pairs that exemplify what Samira Kawash has called ‘interracial twins:’ sets of characters whose parties ‘actually,’ ostensibly belong to different ‘races,’ yet whom the text presents as strikingly similar in their appearance. In its characterization of and narratives surrounding these ‘twins,’ the novel exposes the techniques by which racial discourse naturalizes itself and unmasks race as a textual construct, generated by stories and documents that dangerously sustain a reality of their own.
© 2014 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co.
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Titelei
- Inhalt
- Editorial
- Variations on Dickens’s Great Expectations: Lloyd Jones’s Mr. Pip
- ‘Race’ and Realism: Vision, Textuality, and Charles Chesnutt’s The Marrow of Tradition
- ‘Language is the House We Live in:’ Language-Centeredness and the Limits of Political Activism in Post-War American Poetry (1950-1980)
- “A Prophet out of Gwalia:” The Poetry of Idris Davies and Postcolonial Wales
- “I Get My Culture Where I Can:” Functions of Intertextuality in Zadie Smith’s On Beauty
- Buchbesprechungen
- Bucheingänge
- Die Autoren dieses Heftes
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Titelei
- Inhalt
- Editorial
- Variations on Dickens’s Great Expectations: Lloyd Jones’s Mr. Pip
- ‘Race’ and Realism: Vision, Textuality, and Charles Chesnutt’s The Marrow of Tradition
- ‘Language is the House We Live in:’ Language-Centeredness and the Limits of Political Activism in Post-War American Poetry (1950-1980)
- “A Prophet out of Gwalia:” The Poetry of Idris Davies and Postcolonial Wales
- “I Get My Culture Where I Can:” Functions of Intertextuality in Zadie Smith’s On Beauty
- Buchbesprechungen
- Bucheingänge
- Die Autoren dieses Heftes