“Esther Weren’t No Harlot”: Rape and Marriage in <i>Go Tell It on the Mountain</i>

To consider how James Baldwin resisted racialized notions of sexuality in his first novel, Go Tell It on the Mountain, I employ a number of black feminist critics—including Saidiya Hartman, Patricia Williams, Hortense Spillers, and Patricia Hill Collins—to analyze three under-studied minor character...

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Main Author: Porter Nenon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Manchester University Press 2017-10-01
Series:James Baldwin Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jbr.openlibrary.manchester.ac.uk/index.php/jbr/article/view/43
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author Porter Nenon
author_facet Porter Nenon
author_sort Porter Nenon
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description To consider how James Baldwin resisted racialized notions of sexuality in his first novel, Go Tell It on the Mountain, I employ a number of black feminist critics—including Saidiya Hartman, Patricia Williams, Hortense Spillers, and Patricia Hill Collins—to analyze three under-studied minor characters: Deborah, Esther, and Richard. Those three characters are best understood as figures of heterosexual nonconformity who articulate sophisticated and important critiques of rape and marriage in America at the turn of the twentieth century. Baldwin thus wrote subversive theories of race and sexuality into the margins of the novel, making its style inextricable from its politics. Baldwin’s use of marginal voices was a deft and intentional artistic choice that was emancipatory for his characters and that remains enduringly relevant to American sexual politics. In this particularly polarizing transition from the Obama era to the Donald J. Trump presidency, I revisit Baldwin’s ability to subtly translate political ideas across fault lines like race, nationality, and sex.
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spelling doaj.art-c6f4d11b27c3471cacc957a47fbbf9762022-12-21T22:49:26ZengManchester University PressJames Baldwin Review2056-92032056-92112017-10-013192610.7227/JBR.3.229“Esther Weren’t No Harlot”: Rape and Marriage in <i>Go Tell It on the Mountain</i>Porter NenonTo consider how James Baldwin resisted racialized notions of sexuality in his first novel, Go Tell It on the Mountain, I employ a number of black feminist critics—including Saidiya Hartman, Patricia Williams, Hortense Spillers, and Patricia Hill Collins—to analyze three under-studied minor characters: Deborah, Esther, and Richard. Those three characters are best understood as figures of heterosexual nonconformity who articulate sophisticated and important critiques of rape and marriage in America at the turn of the twentieth century. Baldwin thus wrote subversive theories of race and sexuality into the margins of the novel, making its style inextricable from its politics. Baldwin’s use of marginal voices was a deft and intentional artistic choice that was emancipatory for his characters and that remains enduringly relevant to American sexual politics. In this particularly polarizing transition from the Obama era to the Donald J. Trump presidency, I revisit Baldwin’s ability to subtly translate political ideas across fault lines like race, nationality, and sex.https://jbr.openlibrary.manchester.ac.uk/index.php/jbr/article/view/43James Baldwin, Go Tell It on the Mountain, sexual politics, polarization, Barack Obama, Donald Trump
spellingShingle Porter Nenon
“Esther Weren’t No Harlot”: Rape and Marriage in <i>Go Tell It on the Mountain</i>
James Baldwin Review
James Baldwin, Go Tell It on the Mountain, sexual politics, polarization, Barack Obama, Donald Trump
title “Esther Weren’t No Harlot”: Rape and Marriage in <i>Go Tell It on the Mountain</i>
title_full “Esther Weren’t No Harlot”: Rape and Marriage in <i>Go Tell It on the Mountain</i>
title_fullStr “Esther Weren’t No Harlot”: Rape and Marriage in <i>Go Tell It on the Mountain</i>
title_full_unstemmed “Esther Weren’t No Harlot”: Rape and Marriage in <i>Go Tell It on the Mountain</i>
title_short “Esther Weren’t No Harlot”: Rape and Marriage in <i>Go Tell It on the Mountain</i>
title_sort esther weren t no harlot rape and marriage in i go tell it on the mountain i
topic James Baldwin, Go Tell It on the Mountain, sexual politics, polarization, Barack Obama, Donald Trump
url https://jbr.openlibrary.manchester.ac.uk/index.php/jbr/article/view/43
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