An Afterword About Self/Communal Care

Ayanna Thompson
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Abstract

It is interesting to note that the terms “Shakespeare” and “social justice” are neither assumed to be synonymous nor necessarily “relevant” to each other. I find this particularly ironic because as a black, female Shakespeare scholar, I have come to think of Shakespeare as my great secret weapon. I frequently wield him in the service of dialogues about equality, justice, and progress as a hidden dagger that slices to the heart of the matter. As a graduate student, I specifically chose not to specialize in African-American literature and culture because I thought (naively and mistakenly) that I would not get a large enough set of interlocutors; many who are resistant to pedagogies/scholarship of justice simply opt not to engage with (i.e. ignore all together) African-American literature, culture, and scholarship. Shakespeare, on the other hand, has been so thoroughly adopted as both the epitome of high culture and as quintessentially American (regardless of the pesky fact of his birth in Stratford-upon-Avon) that many come to his works on the page, the stage, and in the classroom with their defenses down. They are more open and available to complex social issues when they encounter them in Shakespeare’s works. My students regularly comment that they come to my classes to study Shakespeare but leave having learned so much more about our contemporary world. I know that many of you will have heard similar comments....
关于自我/集体关怀的后记
有趣的是,“莎士比亚”和“社会正义”这两个词既不被认为是同义词,也不一定相互“相关”。我觉得这尤其具有讽刺意味,因为作为一名黑人女性莎士比亚学者,我已经开始把莎士比亚视为我最大的秘密武器。在关于平等、正义和进步的对话中,我经常把他当作一把隐藏的匕首,刺入问题的核心。读研究生时,我特意选择不专攻非裔美国人文学和文化,因为我认为(天真而错误地)我找不到足够多的对话者;许多抵制教育学/正义学术的人只是选择不参与(即完全忽视)非裔美国人的文学、文化和学术。另一方面,莎士比亚作为高雅文化的缩影和典型的美国人(尽管他出生在埃文河畔的斯特拉特福这个令人讨厌的事实)已经被彻底接受,以至于许多人在书本上、舞台上和课堂上都放下了戒备。当他们在莎士比亚的作品中遇到复杂的社会问题时,他们会更开放,更容易接受。我的学生经常说,他们来上我的课是为了学习莎士比亚,但离开时却对当代世界有了更多的了解。我知道你们很多人都听到过类似的评论....
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