Outvoting: Pudd’nhead Wilson and the Logic of Apportionment

IF 0.1 0 LITERATURE, AMERICAN
Jennie A. Kassanoff
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract:This forum explores how the fraught nexus of gender and race became central to questions of citizenship and the franchise in the mid-to-late nineteenth century. How did conceptions of the populace – an unremitting contestation of the “we” in “We the People”–shift with the changing electorate before, during, and after the Civil War? Following an introduction by Christopher Malone, Leila Mansouri investigates how slave narratives staged the paradoxes of black electoral politics during the antebellum period. Laura Free then ponders the loyalty oaths imposed on southerners in the immediate aftermath of the Civil War, exploring their relevance to more fundamental questions of citizenship and inclusion. Next, through a close reading of Mark Twain’s Pudd’nhead Wilson, Jennie Kassanoff uncovers how the “gerrymandered black body” consolidated the myth of white male majority rule in an era of tense partisan reapportionment. Collectively, these essays ask us to consider the ways that the nineteenth century continues to reverberate in contemporary debates over race, gender, citizenship and voting rights in today’s fractious United States.
投票优势:布丁海德·威尔逊和分配逻辑
摘要:本论坛探讨了在19世纪中后期,性别和种族之间令人担忧的关系如何成为公民权和公民权问题的核心。在内战之前、期间和之后,民众的概念——“我们人民”中“我们”的不懈争论——是如何随着选民的变化而变化的?在克里斯托弗·马龙的介绍下,莱拉·曼苏里调查了奴隶叙事如何在内战前时期上演黑人选举政治的悖论。劳拉·弗里接着思考了南北战争结束后,南方人被强加的忠诚誓言,并探讨了它们与公民身份和包容等更基本问题的相关性。接下来,通过仔细阅读马克·吐温的《傻瓜威尔逊》,珍妮·卡萨诺夫揭示了在一个党派重新分配的紧张时代,“不公正的黑人身体”是如何巩固白人男性占多数统治的神话的。总的来说,这些文章要求我们思考19世纪在当今美国关于种族、性别、公民身份和投票权的辩论中继续产生影响的方式。
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
0.10
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发文量
15
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