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인종의 역사와 우정의 윤리 —후기 데리다를 통해 다시 본 카리브해의 인종정치학과 자메이카 킨케이드의 작품세계History of Race and Ethics of Friendship: The Caribbean Racial Politics and Jamaica Kincaid’s Fiction Revisited through the Later Derrida’s Political Philosophy

Other Titles
History of Race and Ethics of Friendship: The Caribbean Racial Politics and Jamaica Kincaid’s Fiction Revisited through the Later Derrida’s Political Philosophy
Authors
김준년
Issue Date
2010
Publisher
한국영어영문학회
Keywords
인종; 역사; 윤리; 자끄 데리다; 자메이카 킨케이드; race; history; ethics; Jacques Derrida; Jamaica Kincaid
Citation
영어영문학, v.56, no.1, pp.103 - 133
Journal Title
영어영문학
Volume
56
Number
1
Start Page
103
End Page
133
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hongik/handle/2020.sw.hongik/21426
DOI
10.15794/jell.2010.56.1.006
ISSN
1016-2283
Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to make a critique of racial aspects of Caribbean literature more ethical through a constant concern with history and political philosophy. The first step I take for this purpose is a comparative reading of C. L. R. James’s view of Toussaint L’Ouverture’s position and Frantz Fanon’s view of race and class in the historical context of the Caribbean power-relations. In so doing, I examine how Toussaint’s and Fanon’s wills to negotiation were thwarted in the New World history. To elaborate upon this ethico-political approach, I have recourse to the so-called later Derrida, focusing on his books, such as The Politics of Friendship, Of Hospitality, On Cosmopolitanism and Forgiveness, etc. Taking an up-close look at Derrida’s thought, I argue that his political contemplation of ethics is as effective as his deconstruction of “otherness” in dealing with the nature of ethnic clashes in both the real world and minority literature. In the second half of my paper, I reexamine the issues of race, gender, and class in the three novels of Jamaica Kincaid - Annie John, Lucy, and The Autobiography of My Mother. It is conceivable that from the feminist perspective Kincaid’s fiction has been read as a postcolonial Bildungsroman. In my supplementary attempts to this criticism, I reveal that the teenage narrator’s precocious awareness is still under the colonial influence in the Annie John section. My analysis of Lucy contends that the reasons why the white woman fails to make friends with the young black woman should be sought in the long history of the U.S. racial politics. In the section of The Autobiography of My Mother, I discuss how difficult it is for a minority woman to liberate from the spell of history insofar as she is engaged in the issue of identity. In closing, I pose a need of consolation that literature may grant us by becoming able to produce a different interpretation on all the bleaker reality.
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