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White is a color: Race and the developing modernism of Jean Toomer, Ernest Hemingway, and William Faulkner.

机译:白色是一种颜色:种族和让·图默,欧内斯特·海明威和威廉·福克纳的发展中的现代主义。

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摘要

As scholars have conceptualized American Literature, three prominent literary movements or groups of writers were active in the 1920s and 1930s: the Harlem or Black Renaissance; the Lost Generation or Expatriates; the Southern Renaissance. From each group came a writer whose words forever altered the language and construction of American Literature---Jean Toomer, Ernest Hemingway, and William Faulkner, respectively. Concurrently, in the 1920s and 1930s America experienced significant racial turmoil. African American soldiers returning from World War I demanded equal rights with white soldiers; economic hardship exacerbated racism in the workplace; the South and border states firmly established Jim Crow laws. Bloodshed in race riots in twenty-six cities caused the summer of 1919 to be known as the "Red Summer." In 1922, the House of Representatives passed the Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill. Though the Bill failed in the Senate, lynching became a point of public concern in the 1920s, and its frequency diminished. World War I, which challenged national and personal identities, produced a peace treaty that increased hostile feelings between nations. Both World War I and the subsequent peace challenged white Americans' understanding of the solidarity of race, the relationship between ethnic groups, and the international effectiveness of racial privilege. Toomer, Hemingway, and Faulkner, then, came of age in a consciously racist America and though their individual experiences with race and racism varied greatly, their writings all demonstrate a heightened awareness of blackness, whiteness, and white privilege. Examining their early work together, we see developing a challenge to whiteness and white privilege in America. This early work establishes social construction of race as one of the institutions challenged by American Modernism.;This study focuses on Toomer's Cane (1923), Hemingway's In Our Time (1925), and Faulkner's These 13 (1931). Each is a short-story cycle and involves a dynamism not developed in short-story collections; each shows new choices with language and construction, indicating its seminal role in American Modernism; each includes stories addressing the place of whiteness in social construction. Each writer challenges the accepted understanding of whiteness as well as its role in society. Cane demonstrates the negative effects of whiteness and white privilege on both African Americans and European Americans. In Our Time shows whiteness falling short when challenged by Native Americans, African Americans, and women. These 13 suggests whiteness and white privilege have corrupted the very foundation of democracy and capitalism in the United States.;Reading these texts with attention to the social constructions of race and privilege resituates broadly ideas such as Hemingway's Code. Asserting that courage and honor reside completely in an individual's choice of value and personal behavior, Hemingway's Code removes the need for society to define blackness and whiteness against each other, eliminating privilege. One cannot claim from these texts that America embraced Hemingway's Code or that a nation can survive such individualism, but the potential for social reconstruction is there. Conversely, Faulkner shows the individual subsumed by cultural controls in the South, making identification with race and region more important than the crafting of an independent self. Contradicting the American value of independence, Faulkner's portrayal of race also argues for its diminishment. Faulkner's sense that time is not linear---that the past, present, and future interact and can ultimately be expressed in one sentence---makes each construction of blackness and whiteness relevant. Toomer's belief that America must move away from race as a construct and embrace one hybrid "American Race" likewise eliminates the need for racial construction, comparison, and privilege. Though none of these writers has historically been considered a political activist, the words of these early compositions suggest a citizen's interest in improving the nation. Race, and its pursuant definitions of blackness, whiteness, and privilege, becomes central, then, to both American Modernism and American Democracy.
机译:正如学者们对美国文学的概念化那样,在1920年代和1930年代活跃着三种著名的文学运动或作家群体:哈林或黑人文艺复兴;失去的一代或外籍人士;南部文艺复兴时期。每个小组都有一位作家,他的话语永远改变了美国文学的语言和结构,分别是让·图默,欧内斯特·海明威和威廉·福克纳。同时,在1920年代和1930年代,美国经历了严重的种族动荡。从第一次世界大战中返回的非洲裔美国士兵要求与白人士兵享有平等的权利;经济困难加剧了工作场所的种族主义;南部和边境国家牢固确立了吉姆·克劳法律。在26个城市的种族骚乱中流血,导致1919年夏天被称为“红色夏天”。 1922年,众议院通过了《代尔反林奇法案》。尽管比尔在参议院失败,但私刑在1920年代成为公众关注的焦点,其频率也有所减少。挑战国家和个人身份的第一次世界大战产生了一项和平条约,增进了国家之间的敌对情绪。第一次世界大战及其后的和平都挑战了白人对种族团结,种族之间的关系以及种族特权的国际效力的理解。当时的图默(Toomer),海明威(Hemingway)和福克纳(Faulkner)在有意识的种族主义美国中成长,尽管他们在种族和种族主义方面的个人经历差异很大,但他们的著作都显示出人们对黑人,白人和白人特权的意识增强。一起检查他们的早期工作,我们看到在美国对白人和白人特权提出了挑战。这项早期的工作将种族的社会建构确立为受到美国现代主义挑战的制度之一。这项研究的重点是图默(Toomer)的《甘蔗》(1923),海明威的《我们时代》(1925)和福克纳的《这13个》(1931)。每个都是短篇小说的周期,并且涉及短篇小说集没有发展的动力。每种语言都有新的选择,包括语言和结构,表明了它在美国现代主义中的重要作用。每篇小说都讲述了白人在社会建设中的地位。每位作家都对公认的对白色及其在社会中的作用的理解提出挑战。甘蔗证明了白人和白人特权对非洲裔美国人和欧美人的负面影响。 《我们的时代》表明,在受到美洲原住民,非裔美国人和女性的挑战时,白度不足。这13条暗示着白人和白人特权已经破坏了美国民主和资本主义的基础。;阅读这些文本时注意种族和特权的社会结构,会广泛地引用海明威法典等思想。海明威法典断言勇气和荣誉完全取决于个人对价值和个人行为的选择,从而消除了社会界定彼此之间黑与白,消除特权的需要。不能从这些文本中断言美国接受了《海明威法典》,或者一个国家可以幸免于这种个人主义,但是社会重建的潜力依然存在。相反,福克纳展示了受南方文化控制的个体,这使得对种族和地区的认同比建立独立的自我更为重要。与美国的独立价值观相反,福克纳对种族的描述也主张其减少。福克纳认为时间不是线性的-过去,现在和未来相互作用,并且最终可以用一个句子来表达-使每一种黑色和白色的构造都有意义。图默尔认为美国必须摆脱种族的束缚,接受一个混合的“美国种族”,这消除了对种族建设,比较和特权的需要。尽管从历史上看,这些作家都没有一个被认为是政治活动家,但这些早期著作的用词暗示着公民对改善国家的兴趣。种族及其对黑度,白度和特权的相应定义,对美国现代主义和美国民主都变得至关重要。

著录项

  • 作者单位

    The Florida State University.;

  • 授予单位 The Florida State University.;
  • 学科 American literature.;Modern literature.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2009
  • 页码 114 p.
  • 总页数 114
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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