Date of Completion
5-8-2014
Embargo Period
5-1-2024
Keywords
race, identity, indeterminacy, law, novel, Faulkner, Larsen, Chesnutt
Major Advisor
Clare V. Eby
Associate Advisor
Cathy Schlund-Vials
Associate Advisor
Kate Capshaw
Field of Study
English
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
Open Access
Campus Access
Abstract
In Contested Identities, I chart the path of the legal and literary discourses on racial identity, codified by the 1896 Plessy v. Ferguson decision and culturally ascendant in the early decades of the twentieth century. In this period, a group of American writers produced fiction that implicitly challenged this legal and cultural discourse. My project explores the literary productions of Charles W. Chesnutt, Nella Larsen, and William Faulkner—three writers who undermine, question, and critique the legal and social practices that seek to define and contain individual identities in binary terms. Specifically, in Contested Identities I explore why Chesnutt, Larsen, and Faulkner create characters whose identities are not clearly articulated, defined, or knowable, and why they intentionally position these figures in relation to the law.
At the center of each of these texts there remains a void where racial information might be clearly articulated, defined, or corroborated, but isn’t. This enables Chesnutt, Larsen, and Faulkner to underscore an unresolved tension between what must be true and what cannot be known, a dynamic which throws into relief the maddening complexity of human experience in opposition to cut-and-dry legal and popular definitions of “race,” which operate under the assumption that blood proportions are easily known, and that specific blood proportions determine identity. I argue that it is racial indeterminacy that animates these writers’ explorations of identity, and that it is the fundamental theme that binds these characters and texts together. The law treats race as a matter of identity; my dissertation argues that the law is instead a crucial factor in the formation of the racial identity of individual characters.
Recommended Citation
Nisetich, Rebecca S., "Contested Identities: Racial Indeterminacy and Law in the American Novel, 1900-1942" (2014). Doctoral Dissertations. 435.
https://digitalcommons.lib.uconn.edu/dissertations/435