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Hybridity Othello And The Postcolonial Critics Daniel Roux

  • SKU: BELL-5548032
Hybridity Othello And The Postcolonial Critics Daniel Roux
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Hybridity Othello And The Postcolonial Critics Daniel Roux instant download after payment.

Publisher: Rhodes University, Shakespeare Society of Southern Africa, Institute for the Study of English in Afr
File Extension: PDF
File size: 3.29 MB
Pages: 7
Author: Daniel Roux
Language: English
Year: 2009

Product desciption

Hybridity Othello And The Postcolonial Critics Daniel Roux by Daniel Roux instant download after payment.

Abstract
At least since Frantz Fanon’s Black Skin, White Masks was published in 1952, the postcolonial subject has been defined in relation to split subjectivity, hybridity and alienation. Academics and writers almost routinely invoke two ur-texts in order to discuss something of the problematics surrounding colonisation and the negotiation of race and Otherness: Shakespeare’s The Tempest and Othello. In the case of Othello, there is often a visceral reaction to the black character on stage, a dislocating shock of recognition: thus for Ben Okri, it becomes possible to imagine himself in Othello’s place, Othered as much by the Venetian social context that the narrative describes as by the play’s own potentially racist symbolic. For Caryl Phillips, a personal comparison with Othello, both intimately inserted into and simultaneously alienated from the turbulent cosmopolitan centre of Early Modern Venice, is almost inescapable. In Othello, a generation of critics have recognised a trajectory described by Ania Loomba in Gender, Race, Renaissance Drama:
Othello moves from being a colonized subject existing on the terms of white Venetian society and trying to internalize its ideology, towards being marginalized, outcast and alienated from it in every way, until he occupies its ‘true’ position as its other.
(48)

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