James Baldwin Review | |
"Something Unspeakable": James Baldwin and the "Closeted-ness" of American Power | |
David Jones1  | |
[1] Newcastle University; | |
关键词: James Baldwin; Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick; closeted; Black Queer Studies; African-American literature; Queer Theory; closet; | |
DOI : 10.7227/JBR3.4 | |
来源: DOAJ |
【 摘 要 】
This article reads the work of James Baldwin in dialogue with that of Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick. Taking its cue from Baldwin’s claim that Americans “live […] with something in [their] closet” that they “pretend […] is not there,” it explores his depiction of a United States characterized by the “closeted-ness” of its racial discourse. In doing so, the article draws on Sedgwick’s work concerning how the containment of discourses pertaining to sexuality hinges on the closeting of non-heteronormative sexual practices. Reconceptualizing Sedgwick’s ideas in the context of a black, queer writer like Baldwin, however, problematizes her own insistence on the “historical gay specificity” of the epistemology she traces. To this end, this article does not simply posit a racial counterpart to the homosexual closet. Rather, reflecting Baldwin’s insistence that “the sexual question and the racial question have always been entwined,” I highlight here the interpretive possibilities opened up by intersectional analyses that view race, sexuality, and national identity as coextensive, reciprocal epistemologies.
【 授权许可】
Unknown