70 research outputs found
Time and Crisis: Questions for Psychoanalysis and Race
In the triumvirate of personalities and motivesâfrom Wright and Baldwin to Coatesâwe encounter the essential elements of the âcrisisâ that configures black passage in the New World. These lines of kinship, both consanguineous and ineffable, travelling from father to son, from uncle to nephew, from one generation to the next, lend us a figurative rhythm that grasps the notion of the processionalâthe traversal of time and space that remains fundamentally mysterious, just as we can put our finger directly on the problemâblack life is still as endangered and precarious as it ever was. If one regards such passage as a âcrisis,â then it is precisely because it is riddled with turning points, sudden ruts and rifts in the road when the way seemed smooth and clearâthose moments when decisions must be madeâand from that perspective, African-American cultural apprenticeship offers, by definition, crisis not as a state of exception, but rather, as a steady state, given historical pressures that bear in on it and that become, as a result, intramural pressures. What I wish to do in these remarks is to clarify one of the questions engendered by this predicament, and that is to say, the riddle of identity and how it matters, but even more than an inquiry into the identitarian, I am searching for a protocol through intramural space
Born Again: Faulkner and the Second Birth
When DuBois formulated his concept of âdouble consciousness,â he explicitly had in mind the psychic dilemma of historical subjects relatively new to the conditions of freedom. By 1903, the year of the publication of DuBoisâs Souls of Black Folk, where his âdouble consciousnessâ is elaborated, African-Americans were entering their second generation of emancipation; about seven years later, Faulknerâs Quentin Compson will enter the freshman class at Harvard University, and in the course of that fateful year will rehearse and hear rehearsed the narrative of his grandfatherâs good friend, Thomas Sutpen; but in the astonishing course of Absalom, Absalom! Sutpen âbecomesâ Sutpen only when he discovers something akin to âclass,â as the black servant drives the small barefoot white boy away from the front door of the Big House. We would be justified in calling the epiphany that violently strikes the consciousness of Sutpen a âsecond birth,â the next step that the subject takes after the first one. â âBorn Againâ â explores the implications of the âsecond birthâ for this writing and its relationship to the DuBoisian âdouble consciousness.
A IDEIA DE CULTURA NEGRA
Hortense J. Spillers aborda de forma crĂtica a Cultura Negra em seu artigo âA Ideia de Cultura Negraâ, mesmo sendo consciente que esta ideia de cultura ainda estar por vir. Nesta perspectiva, a autora aborda o que exatamente pode ser entendido por Cultura Negra na nossa era contemporĂąnea, e quais os motivos de ainda nĂŁo existir uma âCultura Negraâ. Spillers inclui em seus estudos, teĂłricos como Williams, Du Bois, entre outros, que tambĂ©m abordam a ideia de Cultura Negra. A partir de uma anĂĄlise desses trabalhos teĂłricos, Spillers faz uma crĂtica ao Afrocentrismo e propĂ”e uma nova visĂŁo da âideia de Cultura Negraâ como um objeto de estudo crĂtico conceitual e instrumento prĂĄtico de transformação e desenvolvimento social.Â
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