Flannery O’Connor, the Phenomenology of Race, and the Institutions of Irony

IF 0.1 3区 文学 0 LITERATURE
Benjamin Mangrum
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract:This essay argues that the representation of race in O’Connor’s short story “The Artificial Nigger” (1955) owes a debt to the continental tradition of phenomenology. Rather than being an abstract philosophical position, this debt signals O’Connor’s self-positioning within the postwar institutions facilitating the production and consumption of literary fiction. In particular, O’Connor’s engagement with the phenomenological tradition and her use of irony are interrelated attempts to negotiate her position within the creative writing institutions of the postwar literary marketplace. O’Connor’s story thus uses irony and philosophical self-inquiry as attempts to disentangle the narrative from the systems and norms of the program era. How should we understand O’Connor’s attempts to negotiate the institutionality of her fiction? And what are the racial politics of using an “artificial” stereotype as a symbol for artistic self-reflexivity? By addressing such issues in O’Connor’s work, this essay in turn poses questions for the discipline and institutionalized procedures of literary criticism.
弗兰纳里·奥康纳,《种族现象学与反讽制度》
摘要:本文认为奥康纳短篇小说《人造黑鬼》(1955)中的种族表现应归功于大陆现象学传统。这种债务不是抽象的哲学立场,而是标志着奥康纳在促进文学小说生产和消费的战后制度中的自我定位。特别是,奥康纳对现象学传统的参与和她对反讽的使用是相互关联的,试图在战后文学市场的创意写作机构中谈判她的地位。因此,奥康纳的故事运用了反讽和哲学式的自我探究,试图将叙事从程序时代的系统和规范中解脱出来。我们应该如何理解奥康纳试图与她的小说的制度性进行协商?用一种“人为的”刻板印象作为艺术自我反思的象征是什么种族政治?通过在奥康纳的作品中解决这些问题,本文反过来对文学批评的纪律和制度化程序提出了问题。
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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CiteScore
0.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
17
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