Spectacle Lynching and Textual Responses

The spectacle lynchings of the early 20th century performed a ritual that assigned roles and distributed racial identities in American society. Representation was an essential component of the ritual, ensuring its diffusion in the images and narratives produced in response to the events. Beginning w...

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Main Author: Wendy Harding
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Université Toulouse - Jean Jaurès 2017-09-01
Series:Miranda: Revue Pluridisciplinaire du Monde Anglophone
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/miranda/10493
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author Wendy Harding
author_facet Wendy Harding
author_sort Wendy Harding
collection DOAJ
description The spectacle lynchings of the early 20th century performed a ritual that assigned roles and distributed racial identities in American society. Representation was an essential component of the ritual, ensuring its diffusion in the images and narratives produced in response to the events. Beginning with a discussion of the lynching photography gathered in James Allen’s Without Sanctuary: Lynching Photography in America, this essay goes on to consider the difficulties that African American writers confront in responding to the images that cast their people in the role of victims. Richard Wright’s poem “Between the World and Me” illustrates how representations of the lynching ritual induce a recurrent cycle of terror that haunts his black speaker. Ta-Nehisi Coates’s 2015 book demonstrates how the political, literary and existential problem endures. Recognizing how representation ensures the replication of racial divisions, Toni Morrison evokes the lynching spectacle in ways that scramble its categories and suggest new configurations of power.
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spelling doaj.art-c3957a5bb246447b8ef38fa529084b782022-12-21T17:31:26ZengUniversité Toulouse - Jean JaurèsMiranda: Revue Pluridisciplinaire du Monde Anglophone2108-65592017-09-011510.4000/miranda.10493Spectacle Lynching and Textual ResponsesWendy HardingThe spectacle lynchings of the early 20th century performed a ritual that assigned roles and distributed racial identities in American society. Representation was an essential component of the ritual, ensuring its diffusion in the images and narratives produced in response to the events. Beginning with a discussion of the lynching photography gathered in James Allen’s Without Sanctuary: Lynching Photography in America, this essay goes on to consider the difficulties that African American writers confront in responding to the images that cast their people in the role of victims. Richard Wright’s poem “Between the World and Me” illustrates how representations of the lynching ritual induce a recurrent cycle of terror that haunts his black speaker. Ta-Nehisi Coates’s 2015 book demonstrates how the political, literary and existential problem endures. Recognizing how representation ensures the replication of racial divisions, Toni Morrison evokes the lynching spectacle in ways that scramble its categories and suggest new configurations of power.http://journals.openedition.org/miranda/10493African Americanbluesidentitylynchingphotographyrepresentation
spellingShingle Wendy Harding
Spectacle Lynching and Textual Responses
Miranda: Revue Pluridisciplinaire du Monde Anglophone
African American
blues
identity
lynching
photography
representation
title Spectacle Lynching and Textual Responses
title_full Spectacle Lynching and Textual Responses
title_fullStr Spectacle Lynching and Textual Responses
title_full_unstemmed Spectacle Lynching and Textual Responses
title_short Spectacle Lynching and Textual Responses
title_sort spectacle lynching and textual responses
topic African American
blues
identity
lynching
photography
representation
url http://journals.openedition.org/miranda/10493
work_keys_str_mv AT wendyharding spectaclelynchingandtextualresponses