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2016 | 13 |

Article title

Race, space and post-colonial landscape in Bernard Malamud’s The Tenants

Title variants

Languages of publication

Abstracts

EN
The following article presents strategies for decolonizing complex ethno-racial and social relationships between Jewish and black characters within a restricted, multifaceted area of a decaying tenement in Bernard Malamud’s The Tenants. This interpretation is concerned with finding features of post-colonial discourse such as the representation of the characters in dichotomous terms: the colonized/colonizer, the observed/the observer, superior/inferior. It focuses on the analysis of the main characters’ different methods of dominating the ‘space or subjectivity’ of each other through surveillance, mimicry and appropriation.

Keywords

Year

Volume

13

Physical description

Dates

published
2016

Contributors

References

  • Arteaga, Alfred. 1997. Chicano Poetics: Heterotexts and Hybridities. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Ashcroft, Bill; Griffiths, Gareth and Tiffin, Helen. 2007. Post-Colonial Studies: The Key Concepts. 2nd edition. Oxon and New York: Routledge.
  • Bhabha, Homi, K. 2004. The Location of Culture. New York: Routledge.
  • Budick, Emily Miller.1998. Blacks and Jews in Literary Conversation. New York: Cambridge University Press.
  • Foucault, Michel. 1984. Foucault Reader. Ed. Paul Rabinow. New York: Panthenon.
  • Fanon, Frantz. 1984. Black Skin, White Masks. London: Pluto Press.
  • Kawash, Samira. 1997. Dislocating the Color Line: Identity, Hybridity, and Singularity in African-American Literature. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
  • Malamud, Bernard. 1972. The Tenants. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books.
  • Martinot, Steve. 2007. “Race and the Ghosts of Ontology.” APA Newsletters. Newsletter on Philosophy and The Black Experience, Spring 2007. Volume 06. ed. John McClendon & George Yancy, Newark: University of Delaware.
  • Mishra,Vijay, and Hodge, Bob.1994. “What is Post (-) Colonialism?” Colonial Discourse and Post-Colonial Theory. A Reader, ed. Patrick Williams and Laura Chrisman, Harlow, England: Pearson Education.
  • Noyes, John K. 1992. Colonial Space: Spatiality in the Discourse of German Southwest-Africa 1884-1915, Chur: Harwood Academic Publishers.
  • Sundquist, Eric, J. 2005. Strangers in the Land: Blacks, Jews, Post-Holocaust America, Harvard: Harvard University Press.
  • Yancy, George. 2005. Whiteness and the Return of the Black Body. PhD Dissertation. Pittsburgh, PA: Duquesne University.

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11320/5790

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.hdl_11320_5790
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