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Blood relations: The cultural work of miscegenation in nineteenth-century American literature.

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Format:
Book
Thesis/Dissertation
Author/Creator:
Edwards, Leigh Holladay.
Contributor:
Erkkila, Betsy, 1944- advisor.
University of Pennsylvania.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Ethnology--Research.
Ethnology.
American literature.
Research.
United States--Research.
United States.
0323.
0591.
0631.
Penn dissertations--English.
English--Penn dissertations.
Local Subjects:
Penn dissertations--English.
English--Penn dissertations.
0323.
0591.
0631.
Physical Description:
282 pages
Contained In:
Dissertation Abstracts International 60-07A.
System Details:
Mode of access: World Wide Web.
text file
Summary:
"Blood Relations" analyzes the way nineteenth-century literary texts use racial mixture to explore cultural anxieties about subjectivity and national identity. As many scholars have detailed, nineteenth century Anglo-America overwhelmingly rejected actual, literal interracial sex and reproduction between white and non-white races. Yet I show that on a symbolic level, the dominant white culture actively invoked metaphors of mixing in order to define itself. While it would be more conventional to argue that nineteenth-century culture ignored or suppressed miscegenation because it wanted to believe in racial purity, I illustrate that the culture shaped notions of race not by repressing mixture but rather by obsessively focusing on it. Intermixture emerges as a popular literary trope in the nineteenth century at the same time that amalgamation was becoming more socially and legally taboo. The literary focus on mixing is a way of micro-managing it, encouraging people to think about the interracial in certain ways, not in others. This process of cultural management through endless discussion is similar to nineteenth-century discourses about sexuality; as Foucault has shown us, the nineteenth-century bourgeoisie did not ignore sex, they endlessly talked about it, and their routinized ways of talking about sex worked to narrow and restrict sexual identities. Similarly, American race consciousness requires a discussion of the interracial in order to sustain itself. If Americans had not had interracial sex, their writers would have had to invent it.
I analyze works by writers such as Hawthorne, Melville, Chopin, Twain, and Helen Hunt Jackson, as well as popular Pocahontas narratives and the 1863 miscegenation pamphlet in which the term was coined. These representations titillated readers with America's "open secret" of mixture, speaking to its paradoxical status as both social taboo and defining factor of self and nation. While distancing themselves from literal mixing, these writers simultaneously deploy symbolic intermixing, using mixture metaphorically to stage notions of the identity and the relationship between ideas of nation, gender, and race. I argue that we should place representations of mixture not at the periphery, but at the center of accounts of nineteenth-century culture.
Notes:
Thesis (Ph.D. in English) -- University of Pennsylvania, 1999.
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 60-07, Section: A, page: 2490.
Supervisor: Betsy Erkkila.
Local Notes:
School code: 0175.
ISBN:
9780599389762
Access Restriction:
Restricted for use by site license.

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