南方作为序曲:土著、种族和土地的暂时性或者《为什么我读不懂威廉·福克纳》

Jodi A. Byrd
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引用次数: 8

摘要

作为一名契卡索学者来阅读福克纳的作品,有时会在历史、记忆、家庭和小说的并列中迷失方向;体验本身重新定位和取代,就像它凝聚了过去或一个地方的感觉一样。福克纳的世界建构沉浸在殖民地的场景中,推动了美国南方黑人、白人和土著的矛盾和不和谐的话语,并在这样做的过程中,为我们继续思考奴隶制和殖民主义的交叉点提供了想象的领域。押沙龙阿,押沙龙阿。除了在土著研究、黑人女权主义和酷儿有色人种批评方面的批判性工作外,本章将考虑土著如何打断我们如何理解南方作为美国种族序幕时经常被视为理所当然的时间性和空间性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Souths as Prologues: Indigeneity, Race, and the Temporalities of Land; or, Why I Can’t Read William Faulkner
Reading Faulkner as a Chickasaw scholar can, at times, be disorienting in the juxtapositions of history, remembrance, family, and fiction; the experience itself relocates and displaces as much as it coheres a sense of the past or of a place. Mired in the scenes of settlement, Faulkner’s world-building helped set into motion contradictory and cacophonous discourses of blackness, whiteness, and indigeneity in the American South, and in doing so, provided the imaginative terrains through which we continue think about the intersections of slavery and colonialism. Taking up Absalom, Absalom! alongside critical work in indigenous studies, black feminism, and queer of color critique, this chapter will consider how indigeneity interrupts the temporalities and spatialities that are often taken for granted in how we understand the South as prologue for race in America.
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