Abstract
When critics declare that Edward P. Jones’s The Known World represents moral turpitude, capitalist proclivities, slavery, and whittling of white supremacy, their assertions are in order. But they often miss accounting for how The Known World, which bears some indices of the neo-slave narrative owing to its appropriation of the incidents of slavery in a novelistic platform, complicates its sub-tradition. This work investigates the text’s two-fold complication. First, Jones complicates the neo-slave narrative form by depicting slavery from a little known perspective of intra-racial slavery amongst black people. Then, he casts a white character, and not a black one, in the mold of a classical tragic hero. Mimetic desire, René Girard’s concept for an individual’s imitation of a prior model’s behavior, is drawn on to bare characters’ actions that accentuate both strands of complication. As the basis of all human action that includes rivalry, violence, and scapegoating, mimetic desire unravels the ‘mystery’ surrounding the sort of slavery overwhelmingly acknowledged by critics as untraditional in The Known World and the tragedy, also unique to the neo-slave narrative form, it gives rise to.
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© 2018 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Frontmatter
- Contributions
- Intermediales Ensemble der „Narrenburg“: Stifters Solitär in vergleichender Methode
- „Stierkampf in Bayonne“ – Corrida in Lissabon
- Ex Uno Plures: Global French in, on and of the Rue Morgue and the Orient Express
- Warum „ekelhaftestes Film-Machwerk“?
- Shane and the Language of Men
- Mimetic Desire and the Complication of the Conventional Neo-Slave Narrative Form in Edward P. Jones’s The Known World
- Fantasy and its Suspension in an Age of Awkwardness: Timur Vermes’s Look Who’s Back
- Reviews
- Natalia Igl and Julia Menzel, eds.: Illustrierte Zeitschriften um 1900. Mediale Eigenlogik, Multimodalität und Metaisierung. Bielefeld: Transcript, 2016 (Edition Medienwissenschaft). 420 pp.
- Stefanie Retzlaff: Observieren und Aufschreiben. Zur Poetologie medizinischer Fallgeschichten (1700–1765). Paderborn: Wilhelm Fink, 2018. 231 S.
- Katharina Döderlein: Die Diskrepanz zwischen Recht und Rechtsgefühl in der Literatur: ein Dramatischer Dualismus von Heinrich von Kleist bis Martin Walser. Würzburg: Königshausen & Neumann, 2017. 339 pp.
- Philipp Weber: Kosmos und Subjektivität in der Frühromantik. Paderborn: Fink, 2017. 234 S.
- Lisa Baraitser: Enduring Time. London et al.: Bloomsbury Academic, 2017. 224 pp.
- Felix Trautmann, Hg.: Das politische Imaginäre. Mit Texten von Isolde Charim, Andreas Hetzel, Claude Lefort, Oliver Marchart, Louis Marin, Ethel Matala de Mazza, Juliane Rebentisch, Martin Saar, Felix Trautmann. Berlin: August Verlag, 2017 (Freiheit und Gesetz V). 240 S.
- Jacob Taubes: Apokalypse und Politik: Aufsätze, Kritiken und kleinere Schriften. Hgg. Herbert Kopp-Oberstebrink und Martin Treml. Paderborn: Fink, 2017. 446 pp.
- Giorgio Agamben: Creazione e anarchia. L’opera nell’età della religione capitalista. Vicenza: Neri Pozza, 2017. 139 pp.
- Marcel Broodthaers ein Maler? Über die Sonderstellung eines Mediums unter post-medialen Bedingungen
- Review: Reihe Literatur und Politik
- Michael Schmitz, Hg.: Literatur und Politik. Zwischen Engagement und „Neuer Subjektivität“. Trier: Wissenschaftlicher Verlag Trier, 2017. 150 S.
- Review: Reihe Wieder gelesen
- Die Ko-Präsenz der Igel. Vom unendlichen Gespräch zum Literarisch-Absoluten, billet aller-retour
- Retraction
- Retraction of: We Are Not Free to Choose: Class Determinism in Zadie Smith’s NW
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Frontmatter
- Contributions
- Intermediales Ensemble der „Narrenburg“: Stifters Solitär in vergleichender Methode
- „Stierkampf in Bayonne“ – Corrida in Lissabon
- Ex Uno Plures: Global French in, on and of the Rue Morgue and the Orient Express
- Warum „ekelhaftestes Film-Machwerk“?
- Shane and the Language of Men
- Mimetic Desire and the Complication of the Conventional Neo-Slave Narrative Form in Edward P. Jones’s The Known World
- Fantasy and its Suspension in an Age of Awkwardness: Timur Vermes’s Look Who’s Back
- Reviews
- Natalia Igl and Julia Menzel, eds.: Illustrierte Zeitschriften um 1900. Mediale Eigenlogik, Multimodalität und Metaisierung. Bielefeld: Transcript, 2016 (Edition Medienwissenschaft). 420 pp.
- Stefanie Retzlaff: Observieren und Aufschreiben. Zur Poetologie medizinischer Fallgeschichten (1700–1765). Paderborn: Wilhelm Fink, 2018. 231 S.
- Katharina Döderlein: Die Diskrepanz zwischen Recht und Rechtsgefühl in der Literatur: ein Dramatischer Dualismus von Heinrich von Kleist bis Martin Walser. Würzburg: Königshausen & Neumann, 2017. 339 pp.
- Philipp Weber: Kosmos und Subjektivität in der Frühromantik. Paderborn: Fink, 2017. 234 S.
- Lisa Baraitser: Enduring Time. London et al.: Bloomsbury Academic, 2017. 224 pp.
- Felix Trautmann, Hg.: Das politische Imaginäre. Mit Texten von Isolde Charim, Andreas Hetzel, Claude Lefort, Oliver Marchart, Louis Marin, Ethel Matala de Mazza, Juliane Rebentisch, Martin Saar, Felix Trautmann. Berlin: August Verlag, 2017 (Freiheit und Gesetz V). 240 S.
- Jacob Taubes: Apokalypse und Politik: Aufsätze, Kritiken und kleinere Schriften. Hgg. Herbert Kopp-Oberstebrink und Martin Treml. Paderborn: Fink, 2017. 446 pp.
- Giorgio Agamben: Creazione e anarchia. L’opera nell’età della religione capitalista. Vicenza: Neri Pozza, 2017. 139 pp.
- Marcel Broodthaers ein Maler? Über die Sonderstellung eines Mediums unter post-medialen Bedingungen
- Review: Reihe Literatur und Politik
- Michael Schmitz, Hg.: Literatur und Politik. Zwischen Engagement und „Neuer Subjektivität“. Trier: Wissenschaftlicher Verlag Trier, 2017. 150 S.
- Review: Reihe Wieder gelesen
- Die Ko-Präsenz der Igel. Vom unendlichen Gespräch zum Literarisch-Absoluten, billet aller-retour
- Retraction
- Retraction of: We Are Not Free to Choose: Class Determinism in Zadie Smith’s NW