A Race of Devils: Race-Making, Frankenstein, and The Modern Prometheus

被引:2
|
作者
Brendese, P. J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Johns Hopkins Univ, Dept Polit Sci, 3400 N Charles St,357 Mergenthaler Hall, Baltimore, MD 21218 USA
关键词
race; Frankenstein; monstrosity; colonialism; Prometheus; humanism;
D O I
10.1177/0090591720988686
中图分类号
D0 [政治学、政治理论];
学科分类号
0302 ; 030201 ;
摘要
This essay engages Mary Shelley's Frankenstein or The Modern Prometheus as a salient intervention into modern political theory. I analyze the work as a cipher for the tensions inhabiting Euro-modernity's stitched together fictions of racial determinism and racial dynamism legible in slavery, assimilationist projects and White fears reverberating throughout. Adapting the mythical ancient Prometheus as one who steals fire from the gods to create humans and civilization, Frankenstein dramatizes the risks and monstrous results of White imperial masculinity as a Euro-colonial Promethean project of subject formation and race-making. Viewed through the prism of the Modern Prometheus, modernity in general and liberal humanism in particular are recast as monster-making projects. The European "discovery" of Indigenous peoples amplified Promethean aspirations to create subjects through civilizational processes of religious conversion, the infusion of Enlightenment rationality, and assimilation into whiteness. Politically, the Promethean capacity to engineer humans and proto-humans using Native peoples as raw material allowed progressives to argue against outright extermination in favor of cultural genocide. Seeking to create a subserviant species, Victor Frankenstein confronts a revolting insurrection of his own making-a Creature who refuses slavery, claims mastery over his creator and demands a female companion. Yet Frankenstein's fear of creating "a race of devils" betrays a terror of what Whites know, but refuse to acknowledge, about themselves and racial others.
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页码:86 / 113
页数:28
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