De/Constructing White Supremacy: Contending Antipodal Politics in Richard Wright’s Native Son (1940)

Niyi Akingbe, Emmanuel Adeniyi
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Abstract

Arguably, fear, anger and despair dominate the poor, uneducated, twenty-year-old Bigger Thomas’s daily existence in Richard Wright’s Native Son. Nevertheless, old lies of white supremacy that have held black people in perpetual turmoil are crushed through violent reaction when Bigger strikes at white hegemony through the killing of Mary Dalton. This backlash throws the white community into panic mode. Apparently, African Americans’ increased susceptibility to the inferiority complex of the 1930s was dictated by the dubious racial stratification that allotted a place of superiority to the white race over the black race, which was considered inferior. This misconception was supported by Arthur de Gobineau’s The Inequality of Human Races ([1853] 1915) and Lucien Levy-Bruhl’s How Natives Think (1926). Bigger’s humanity, like that of other African-American youth of this period, is overwhelmed by the racial prejudices of the supremacist whites which demand that they must be meek, submissive and self-debased. As summed up at the trial of Bigger, American society gives black people no options in life and essentially denies them the basic rights of all humans to fulfil their destiny in relationship to the measure of their intelligence and talents. These denials have led to anger, shame and fear which have snowballed into crime and murder. We may, without difficulty, agree that Wright’s portrayal of the killing of Mary is not in any way designed to make Bigger a hero of the black protest against racial marginality. Rather, Bigger is created to accentuate the effects of suffocating social conditions that could turn an individual into an American “native son” raised in an atmosphere of transcendental hopelessness and weaned on the diet of violence, hatred and viciousness which provided the immediate platform for the launching of a backlash against American racism. Using the foregoing as its standpoint, this article examines white/black antipodes and race tensions in Richard Wright’s Native Son. It employs the Freudian conceptual construct of the human psyche, divided into the id, ego and superego, as a theoretical framework. A parallel of the hypothesis is conceived to expound the white/black taxonomy in race discourse. In Freudian psychology, the id is irrational and it projects pleasure principles. The ego is, however, rational and mature, while the superego mediates between the id and the ego. These paradigms are used to explore the collective psyche of race theorists in the paper.
解构/建构白人至上主义:理查德·赖特《土生土长的儿子》(1940)中的对立政治
可以说,在理查德·赖特的《土生土长的儿子》中,恐惧、愤怒和绝望主宰着贫穷、没有受过教育的20岁男孩比格·托马斯的日常生活。然而,当比格通过杀害玛丽·道尔顿(Mary Dalton)打击白人霸权时,白人至上主义的旧谎言被暴力反应粉碎,这些谎言使黑人永远处于动荡之中。这种反弹使白人社区陷入恐慌状态。显然,非裔美国人在20世纪30年代对自卑情结的日益敏感,是由可疑的种族分层所决定的,这种分层给白人赋予了优越的地位,而黑人则被认为是劣等的。这种误解得到了Arthur de Gobineau的《人类种族的不平等》([1853]1915)和Lucien Levy-Bruhl的《当地人如何思考》(1926)的支持。与这一时期的其他非裔美国青年一样,比格的人性也被白人至上主义的种族偏见所压倒,这种偏见要求他们必须温顺、顺从和自卑。正如在Bigger的审判中总结的那样,美国社会在生活中没有给黑人任何选择,从本质上剥夺了他们实现与他们的智力和才能有关的命运的所有人类的基本权利。这些否认导致了愤怒、羞耻和恐惧,这些愤怒、羞耻和恐惧滚雪球般地演变成犯罪和谋杀。我们可能会毫不费力地同意,赖特对玛丽之死的描绘绝不是为了让比格成为黑人反对种族边缘化抗议的英雄。相反,《更大》的创作是为了强调令人窒息的社会条件的影响,这种社会条件可能会把一个人变成一个美国“本土儿子”,在先验的绝望氛围中长大,在暴力、仇恨和邪恶的饮食中断奶,这为发起对美国种族主义的强烈抵制提供了直接的平台。本文以上述观点为立脚点,考察了理查德·赖特的《土生之子》中白人/黑人的对立和种族紧张关系。它采用弗洛伊德的人类心理概念结构,分为本我,自我和超我,作为理论框架。本文提出了一个平行的假设来阐述种族话语中的白人/黑人分类法。在弗洛伊德心理学中,本我是非理性的,它投射出快乐原则。然而,自我是理性和成熟的,而超我介于本我和自我之间。本文利用这些范式来探讨种族理论家的集体心理。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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