让一个学者成为黑人:黑人话语取向的建构性分析

IF 0.3 4区 哲学 0 LITERATURE
Amir R. A. Jaima
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要:非洲学者经常把他们的文章交给一位含蓄的白人读者。这种倾向被本文描述为“对白人的话语取向”,其有害影响是限制了学者研究问题和建议的范围和严谨性。这项分析考察了另一种话语性的“面孔”,这是继J·桑德斯·雷丁近80年前的观察之后的,该观察仍然令人不安地富有洞察力:“黑人作家不得不有两张面孔……以满足两个不同的(当不是完全相反时是对立的)观众,即黑人和白人。学者们在文本中以多种方式描述了这第二张脸——从气质、节奏或“美学”的角度来看。“通过对一些典型文本的分析,本研究将描述一些最显著的特征,最终为“黑人”学者提供一些有效的、解放性的修辞策略。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
To Make a Scholar Black: A Constructive Analysis of the Discursive Orientation Toward Blackness
abstract:Africana scholars often address their texts to a reader who is implicitly white. This tendency, which this article characterizes as the "discursive orientation toward whiteness," has the pernicious effect of limiting the range and rigor of scholars' research questions and proposal. This analysis examines the other discursive "face," following J. Saunders Redding's observation from almost eighty years ago, which remains unnervingly insightful: "Negro [sic] writers have been obliged to have two faces . . . to satisfy two different (and opposed when not entirely opposite) audiences, the [B]lack and the white." Scholars have described this second face in the text in a number of ways—variously as a temperament, a rhythm, or an "aesthetic." Through an analysis of a few exemplary texts, the current study will describe a few of the most salient characteristics, ultimately in the service of equipping the "Black" scholar with a few effective, liberatory rhetorical strategies.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.70
自引率
25.00%
发文量
28
期刊介绍: Philosophy and Rhetoric is dedicated to publication of high-quality articles involving the relationship between philosophy and rhetoric. It has a longstanding commitment to interdisciplinary scholarship and welcomes all theoretical and methodological perspectives that advance the journal"s mission. Philosophy and Rhetoric invites articles on such topics as the relationship between logic and rhetoric, the philosophical aspects of argumentation, philosophical views on the nature of rhetoric held by historical figures and during historical periods, psychological and sociological studies of rhetoric with a strong philosophical emphasis, and philosophical analyses of the relationship to rhetoric of other areas of human culture and thought, political theory and law.
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