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Interracial rape and the appropriation of the 'White mask': a psychoanalytical reading of Lewis Nkosi's Mating birdsFortuin, Bernard Nolen 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA (English))--University of Stellenbosch, 2009. / This thesis argues that Ndi Sibiya, fictional writer and protagonist of the novel, Mating Birds by Lewis Nkosi develops a pathological obsession with Veronica Slater, a white woman for whose rape Sibiya is about to be executed. One of the many theorists that have commented on the effects of race on sexuality, particularly in colonized black people is Frantz Fanon. In Black Skin White Masks Fanon asks a question based on Freud’s question, “What does a woman want?” Fanon’s question is different in that he asks, what do black people want, which opens the way for a post-colonial psychoanalytical analysis of Ndi Sibiya. What he is concerned with in Black Skin White Masks is a post-colonial psycho-analytical evaluation of the state of being black in colonial societies. Nkosi does the same in his novel, whereas he deals with Apartheid South Africa as an extension of colonialism. Nkosi and Fanon are both addressing the broader psychological impact racially oppressive societies have on the black person’s psyche. Fanon in his psychoanalytical study of the black man from within the Freudian framework aims to save the man of colour from himself (9) by giving black people a warning that is not much different from the warning Sibiya’s father gives to him: do not lust after the white man’s woman.
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CRIME FICTION AS A LENS FOR POLITICAL AND SOCIAL CRITIQUE IN THE MODERN ARAB WORLD: ELIAS KHOURY’S <i>WHITE MASKS</i> AND YASMINA KHADRA’S <i>MORITURI</i>Rachel Hannah Hackett (10682463) 07 May 2021 (has links)
<p>This thesis
argues that <i>Morituri</i> by Yasmina Khadra and <i>White Masks</i> by Elias
Khoury use the genre of the detective novel as a pretext for social and
political critique of Algeria and Lebanon respectively. This thesis links the generic (crime
fiction) and the conceptual (Political and Social Critique in Modern Arab
World). While the
detective novel is traditionally thought of as a non-academic, entertaining
part of popular culture, the use of the genre to critique the failure of nation
building after colonization elevates the genre and transforms it from mere
entertainment to a more serious genre. Both novels are emblematic of a shift in
the use of the detective and crime novel to address the political disarray in
their respective states and the Arab world as a whole. As modern examples of
detective novels in the modern Arab world, <i>Morituri</i> and <i>White Masks</i>
transform the genre through their complex interweaving of aspects of the
popular genre of detective fiction with the more serious political novel. The
historical and political context of both countries at the time of the novels’
settings are an intrinsic part of understanding the crimes and the obfuscation
of the perpetrator. In both of these novels, the technical and generic aspects
are connected to the thematic, and the detective novel structure is not just
there for suspense and entertainment. Instead, this structure points to the
neocolonial system, benefitting the most powerful and the most affluent at the
expense of the weak, poor, and disadvantaged.</p>
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Being and Otherness: Conceptualizing Embodiment in Africana Existentialist Discourse (<i>The Bluest Eye</i>, <i>The Fire Next Time</i>, and <i>Black Skin, White Masks</i>)Brownlee, Jonathan J. 28 August 2020 (has links)
No description available.
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