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Showing papers in "Arizona Quarterly: A Journal of American Literature, Culture, and Theory in 2021"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The threat of consumption is a critical (and overlooked) aspect of these tropes, allowing commentators to show how the slave system fuses abstract economics and lived experience, instinctive impulses and careful strategy as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: Abstract:From the late-eighteenth to the mid-nineteenth century, abolitionists used depictions of hungry animals such as sharks, birds, and dogs to capture the consumptive logic of chattel slavery. In the hands of white abolitionists, these tropes offered powerful condemnations of the appetites driving the slave system, but they also risked implying that enslaved people were \"natural\" prey and passive victims. In response, African American abolitionists reworked hungry animal tropes to emphasize resistance and to offer a more nuanced picture of the psyche of enslavers. Building on recent scholarship on animals in the discourse on slavery, this essay reveals that the threat of consumption is a critical (and overlooked) aspect of these tropes, allowing commentators to show how the slave system fuses abstract economics and lived experience, instinctive impulses and careful strategy.

10 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper explored the dialectical implications of drink vs. abstinence in Manhattan Transfer and USA and found that drink plays an intricate role in Dos Passos's socio-political critique, while abstinence, the opposite, exemplifies the inhumaneness of a reduced world view that prioritizes the instrumental logic of capitalism and demands unquestioning subjugation to the given conditions.
Abstract: The pervasiveness of alcohol in John Dos Passos’s major works, Manhattan Transfer and USA, has been widely noticed. Yet abstinence, the opposite, is just as conspicuous. This article explores the dialectical implications of drink vs. abstinence, which—together with considerations of the cultural history and contemporaneous political issues connected with alcohol—reveal that drink plays an intricate role in Dos Passos’s socio-political critique. While drink symbolizes human life with all its complexities and contradictions, its opposite, abstinence, exemplifies the inhumaneness of a reduced world view that prioritizes the instrumental logic of capitalism and demands unquestioning subjugation to the given conditions. Contemporaneous critics of John Dos Passos’s USA trilogy complained that “almost everyone lives from bar to bed” and that the characters “drink enough liquor to make this the most eloquent temperance tract since The Beautiful and Damned” (“Unsigned review” 147; De Voto 127).2 Since then, other critics have remarked on the prominence of drink in Dos Passos’s works. Colin Hutchinson, for example, compares drink and hedonism in USA with their role in Pynchon’s Against the Day. He argues for a putative Puritanism in Dos Passos, as the heavy drinkers all meet with “grim fates” (178). But, pace Hutchinson, the “grim fates” I am deeply grateful to Alan Robinson and Roy Sellars as well as to the anonymous reviewers for their insightful comments and highly valued suggestions. are not only reserved for those who “cavort ruinously” and fail to defer “gratification in the name of a distant goal” (178, 180). Instead, in Dos Passos’s works, both the “wet” and the “dry” characters are barred from leading a “right life” (Adorno 43): the former tend to lose their lives literally, while the latter, who are superficially successful, tend to lose their souls. It is not only the manifestation of drink which is conspicuous, but also its negation. Drink thus needs to be analyzed dialectically, in the light of its obverse. A dialectical reading invites comparisons with and receives support from two major advocates of dialectical thinking of the time: Theodor W. Adorno and Max Horkheimer, who analyze US society in the early twentieth century in their joint work The Dialectic of Enlightenment (1944). Following their method of studying the particular, the “micrological detail” as symptomatic for the whole (Miller 79), I will use drink and its negation as an analytical tool to approach the whole of Dos Passos’s project in Manhattan Transfer and USA. A dialectical reading is also implicitly called for by Donald Pizer’s observation that Dos Passos aimed at an “underlying ‘geometry’ of meaning” through recurrent thematic juxtaposition (15). As a micrological detail, drink lends itself to the analysis of more general concerns not only through text-immanent criticism, but also through its particular role in American history and its pervasive presence in Western culture since Biblical times. Although the negative effects of alcohol abuse have been documented since antiquity, only the nineteenth century saw noteworthy anti-drink movements. The reasons for the heightened sensitivity towards alcohol abuse, especially in the United States, are certainly complex and are much debated among historians. Puritan zeal, social stratification with an emerging middle-class norm of moral behavior, the transfer and mixing of different drinking cultures through colonial trade and migration, the growing availability of alcohol as a consumer good for the poor, dire and crowded housing conditions in rapidly growing cities, and the need for Arizona Quarterly 77.3 (Fall 2021): 55-79 Preprint reliable, punctual and concentrated workers in the newly-founded factories are all suggested as factors which made drink a socio-political issue.3 In other words, it was mainly the corollaries of industrialization that seem to have aggravated the problem of abuse, so that several historians even maintain that addiction—whether to alcohol, other drugs or to the conspicuous consumption required by an excessive, capitalist production—is a modern concept.4 The rising power of the temperance movements, especially the Anti-Saloon League, and the reality of Prohibition in the USA both politicized drink. The call for abstinence increasingly turned into a means of control over the lower classes by ensuring that they stayed sober, remained industrious, and did not organize in saloons.5 Thus, workers were required to forego habits for the sake of industrial production. They were to “model their body and soul according to the technical apparatus” (Horkheimer and Adorno 29) and turn “into a living appendage of the machine” (Marx, Capital 484). The closure of saloons, which were much more than mere drinking places, as a form of negating drink to workers, thus came to be felt as a palpable means of suppression.6 In addition, when temperance campaigns became increasingly dominated by white Protestant nationalists (in the beginning, temperance was also propagated by many groups with a civil-rights agenda), anti-drink crusades strove to undermine lower-class solidarity by especially blaming the non-Protestant immigrants, such as the wine-drinking Italians, the whiskey-drinking Irish, and the vodka-drinking East European Jews.7 Nativist temperance propaganda contributed to a general shift in the perception of social conflict, away from class struggle towards cultural difference. Alan Trachtenberg, for instance, shows in his extensive study that the ideology of identifying Americanness with the successful, white, Anglo-Saxon and Protestant businessman also made the white American working class appear to be “foreign, alien, in need of Americanizing,” as they lived indecently in crowded homes and Arizona Quarterly 77.3 (Fall 2021): 55-79 Preprint drank too much, like any foreigner (87). This perception is echoed by Dos Passos in Camera Eye 51: “they have made us foreigners in the land where we were born” (USA 1209). Hence the growing nationalism and conservatism of the temperance movements benefitted the elites as they helped make the “social divisions and lines of control all but invisible” (Trachtenberg 161). A nationalist, exclusive agenda seems incompatible with Dos Passos’s obvious veneration of “our storybook democracy” (USA 893). The numerous references to Walt Whitman, especially in USA, reveal Dos Passos’s high esteem for an American tradition that reveres the ideals of democracy, integrity and plurality.8 This high esteem becomes visible, amongst other things, through his plot structure, where a plurality of characters are represented as forming the backbone of a city or a nation; and his narrative strategy proposes a plurality in unity through the diverse stylistic modes which characterize his works. It can be said that he gives the US state-political maxim of E pluribus unum a socio-political meaning. Prohibition is, however, not the only phenomenon that gives alcoholic drink a prominent role in history. Western tradition itself is inseparable from a culture of drink and drinking (Nicholls, “Bottling Up” 106; “Introduction”). Researchers maintain that ancient civilizations typically had a specific holy drug for cultic purposes and medical treatment.9 While Native Americans chose tobacco, alcohol was the holy drug of Greek myth and the Judeo-Christian tradition, upon which societies in Europe and modern America are molded. The Dionysus cult celebrated vitality and the joy of life with drink; wine and strong drink are important gifts from and offerings to the God of the Old Testament (Numbers 28:7; Deuteronomy 14:26); the New Testament tells of Christ’s first miracle at the wedding in Cana (John 2:1-11), where “he made the water wine” (John 4:46). Furthermore, it is an alcoholic drink that in Catholic belief transubstantiates into divine blood at Communion. Thus drink is linked to life as given and protected by God, a life that—as the wedding Arizona Quarterly 77.3 (Fall 2021): 55-79 Preprint suggests— procreates thus engendering plurality (Arendt) and a life that vouches for social communion as symbolized by the Last Supper. The formal centrality of a drunkard like Stan Emery to Manhattan Transfer and Dos Passos’s critical representation of abstinence in USA become more plausible when considering this cultural legacy with its fundamentally lifeaffirming symbolism of drink. The cultural bond between drink and religion, moreover, has affinities to a key aspect of the Critical Theory of Adorno and Horkheimer, that is, to the concepts of “objective reason” or “rationality.”10 Objective reason focuses “on the idea of the greatest good, on the problem of human destiny, and on the way of realization of ultimate goals” (Horkheimer 2). Religion is one traditional form of objective reason, as it establishes an objective rationality transcending the horizon of the individual subject. Enlightenment, however, together with the development of the sciences and the corollary aspiration to become as knowledgeable as God Himself, is said to have provoked a change of paradigm. “Subjective” or “instrumental reason” became dominant: [Subjective reason] is essentially concerned with means and ends, with the adequacy of procedures for purposes more or less taken for granted and supposedly selfexplanatory. It attaches little importance to the question whether the purposes as such are reasonable. If it concerns itself at all with ends, it takes for granted that they too are reasonable in the subjective sense, i.e. that they serve the subject’s interest in relation to self-preservation. (Horkheimer 1)11 Instrumental reason tends to see an idea or an object as related to a purpose and no longer as “a thing in itself.” According to Horkheimer’s and Adorno’s analyses, the growing dominance of instrumental reason promotes the evaluation of everything and everyone in Arizona Quarterly 77.3 (Fall 2021): 55-

5 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors examines how John Rechy's outlaw sensibility not only mobilized an early form of Queer Chicanidad but also inspired an experimental narrative discourse to critique the neo-imperial governance of the US-Mexico borderlands in the mid-twentieth century.
Abstract: Abstract:This article examines how John Rechy's outlaw sensibility not only mobilized an early form of Queer Chicanidad but also inspired an experimental narrative discourse to critique the neo-imperial governance of the US-Mexico borderlands in the mid-twentieth century. Juxtaposing the recurrence of discrimination against marginalized groups in the United States with the reemergence of empire in the borderlands, Rechy's work articulates a historical genealogy of transnational displacement and migration, which shows how the ostensible freedoms of the present remain rooted in the unfreedoms of the colonial past. Rechy offers a narrative epistemology of border-thinking: a disclosure of transnational consciousness, positioned between temporal and spatial borders, which highlights the unavailability of existential freedom and the need for political struggle. In exploring the contours of Rechy's outlaw aesthetics this article offers a new understanding of Rechy's work that helps expand the fields of global modernism, postwar American literature, and Chicanx studies.

4 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article analyzed the intertextual connections among these constellated texts and examined their allegorizing of the operation of tropology in relation to the paranoid gothic, a quasi-supernatural dynamic in which a male protagonist fears manipulation by an Other to whom his unconsciousness appears transparent.
Abstract: Abstract:This essay considers Constance Fenimore Woolson's \"Miss Grief,\" Hawthorne's \"The Birth-mark,\" James's The Beast in the Jungle, his 1880 essay on Woolson, and Elizabeth Maguire's The Open Door against the backdrop of Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick's theory of the paranoid gothic, a quasi-supernatural dynamic in which a male protagonist fears manipulation by an Other to whom his unconsciousness appears transparent. Through close reading of key figures, notably catachresis, I analyze the intertextual connections among these constellated texts and examine their allegorizing of the operation of tropology in relation to the paranoid gothic.

3 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper proposed misfit professionalism as a critical concept to describe how this emerging generation of Asian Americans categorically mis-fits with institutional norms, resulting in a subject position socially defined by this mis-fitting.
Abstract: Abstract:Since the mid-2000s, many Asian American chefs and restaurateurs have obtained mainstream acclaim by challenging the norms of the restaurant industry. Neither fully conforming to nor opposing industry norms, they reveal new forms of professional and cultural belonging that revise popular perceptions of Asian Americanness. I propose misfit professionalism as a critical concept to describe how this emerging generation of Asian Americans categorically mis-fits with institutional norms, resulting in a subject position socially defined by this mis-fitting. Exercising nonnormative professional practices in an industry where cultural traditions are tethered to professional norms, misfits authorize new narratives of Asian Americanness in popular literary genres like the cookbook. Their cookbooks employ a narrative device that I call the coming-to-career narrative, which challenges the genre's formal conventions. Examining the literariness of cookbook narratives, this article interrogates how industry professionalism engenders new understandings of race, gender, sexuality, and belonging in the twenty-first century.

1 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore the use of the colloquial term "techous" in the short story "The Scarecrow" to represent sexual difference in the rural American South.
Abstract: Abstract:This article explores Elizabeth Madox Roberts' use of the colloquial term \"techous\" in her short story \"The Scarecrow\" to portray sexual difference in the rural American South. Referring to Jack Halberstam's work on rural queer identity, I discuss how techous, which is used to describe Joan, the story's protagonist, for her aversion to human touch, can be understood to represent a unique sexual identity. I analyze one of the story's central images—Joan's creation of a doppelgänger to scare away crows, which Roberts links symbolically to men—as a proto-trans* act, the creation of a body not defined by sex.

1 citations