White Women in Racialized Spaces: Imaginative Transformation and Ethical Action in LiteratureSamina Najmi, Rajini Srikanth SUNY Press, 01/08/2002 - 272 من الصفحات At once racially privileged and sexually marginalized, white women have been energetic in calling for solidarity among all women in opposing patriarchy, but have not been equally motivated to examine their own racial privilege. White Women in Racialized Spaces turns primarily to literature to illuminate the undeniable blind spots in white women s comprehension of their advantage. The contributors cover extensive historical ground, from early captivity narratives of white women in seventeenth-century America up to the present-day trials of Louise Woodward and Manjit Basuta, both British nannies accused of causing the deaths of their infant charges in the United States. Their wide-ranging discussions also include representations of white women in Native American, Latin American, African, Asian, and Middle Eastern contexts. The volume ultimately makes the case that, by creating alternative scenarios to particular ethical, political, or emotional problems against which readers and characters test their responses, literature forms an ideal vehicle for exploring white women s actual and potential roles in their efforts to undercut the oppressive force of whiteness. |
المحتوى
Introduction | 1 |
Brown on White | 27 |
South Asians and the Complex Interstices of Whiteness Negotiating Public Sentiment in the United States and Britain | 29 |
Whiteness and SoapOpera Justice Comparing the Louise Woodward and Manjit Basuta Cases | 51 |
Mother Teresa as the Mirror of Bourgeois Guilt | 67 |
White American Womanhood | 83 |
Ventriloquism in the Captivity Narrative White Women Challenge European American Patriarchy | 85 |
Those Indians Are Great Thieves I Suppose? Historicizing the White Woman in The Squatter and the Don | 105 |
Prison Perversion and Pimps The White Temptress in The Autobiography of Malcolm X and Iceberg Slims Pimp | 147 |
Subject Positions in Elizabeth Bishops Representations of Whiteness and the Other | 167 |
The Global Memsahib | 191 |
How Can a White Woman Love a Black Woman? The AngloBoer War and Possibilities of Desire | 193 |
From Betrayal to Inclusion The Work of the White Womans Qaze in Claire Deniss Chocolat | 207 |
The Imperial Feminine Victorian Women Travellers in Egypt | 227 |
Chinese Coolies Hidden Perfume and Harriet Beecher Stowe in Anna Leonowenss The Romance of the Harem | 243 |
About the Contributors | 257 |
Let Me Play Desdemona White Heroines and Interracial Desire in Louisa May Alcotts My Contraband and ML | 119 |
Getting in Touch with the True South Pet Negroes White Crackers and Racial Staging in Zora Neale Hurstons Seraph on the Suwanee | 131 |
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عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
African American Alamar Alcott's argues Arvay Autobiography Basuta become Bishop's poems black male Boer women Britain British British Asian Cameroon captivity narratives challenge Chocolat citizenship claims Claire Denis Claudia colonial color context Cootchie critics cultural desire discourse Eappen Elizabeth Bishop essay ethnic European feminist fiction film France gender girl Harem Harriet Beecher Stowe Hobhouse Hurston Iceberg Slim ideology immigration imperialism Indian interracial Leonowens's lesbian literary literature lives Lott Louise Woodward Malcolm Malcolm X Mother Teresa Negro novel Nurse Dane oppression patriarchal Pimp political privilege Protée race racial identity racism reading relations relationship representation rhetoric role Ruiz de Burton San Diego Seraph sexual Singapore slave slavery social Sonn Klean South Asian Americans Southern speaker Squatter stereotypes story subject positions tion United Ventriloquism victim Victorian voice White Crackers white female white women whiteness studies woman womanhood writing York