“Useful Idiots: Flannery O’Connor and the Curse of Superiority”

IF 0.1 0 LITERATURE, AMERICAN
T. Black
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract:Flannery O’Connor has recently garnered attention for the manifestations in her own life of the racism she depicted in her fictional characters. These characters register her ambivalence toward her readership, which she imagined as Northern, secular, cosmopolitan, liberal, and largely white. O’Connor populated her stories with caricatures of variously impoverished whites from the South. Drawing on these stories as well as her letters and essays, I show how she designed these characters as “useful idiots” upon whom her presumed readers could project the sin of racist violence. In so doing, O’Connor exposed the presumptions of intellectual, moral, and political supremacy made by her Northern readers when describing what she calls as “Southern degeneracy.” Here I examine two moments—one from history and another from our contemporary moment—when O’Connor implicates herself or is implicated by national conversations about the South and the history of white supremacy that it nurtures.
《有用的白痴:弗兰纳里·奥康纳和优越感的诅咒》
摘要:弗兰纳里·奥康纳最近因其虚构人物中种族主义在自己生活中的表现而备受关注。这些角色反映了她对读者的矛盾心理,她认为读者是北方的、世俗的、国际化的、自由主义的,而且大部分是白人。奥在她的故事中充斥着来自南方的各种贫困白人的漫画。根据这些故事以及她的信件和散文,我展示了她是如何将这些角色设计成“有用的白痴”的,她的假定读者可以向他们投射种族主义暴力的罪恶。在这样做的过程中,奥揭露了她的北方读者在描述她所说的“南方堕落”时提出的知识、道德和政治至上的假设。“在这里,我考察了两个时刻——一个来自历史,另一个来自我们当代的时刻——当奥暗示自己或被关于南方及其培育的白人至上主义历史的全国性对话所牵连时。
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来源期刊
Arizona Quarterly
Arizona Quarterly LITERATURE, AMERICAN-
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
20
期刊介绍: Arizona Quarterly publishes scholarly essays on American literature, culture, and theory. It is our mission to subject these categories to debate, argument, interpretation, and contestation via critical readings of primary texts. We accept essays that are grounded in textual, formal, cultural, and theoretical examination of texts and situated with respect to current academic conversations whilst extending the boundaries thereof.
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