Abstract

In the African American tradition, hybridity is represented in the slave narratives as part of a sadistic configuration of master, mistress, overseer, and slave. But the shift in modalities of power from a regime of punishment to one of discipline, and the progression in the political economy--from a slave economy, through Taylorism-Fordism, (1) to flexible accumulation--are attended a shift in representations of hybridity. While desire was hybridized coercively in the regime of slavery, hybrid desire, once externally imposed, is now interiorized within already transgressed racial boundaries. In African American texts of the twentieth century, we find increasing interrogation of racial and cultural boundaries and a proliferation of images of hybridity. The two novels I examine here, Nella Larsen's Passing and Sherley Anne Williams's Dessa Rose, represent these concerns in different ways, but both are relentless in their interrogation of hybridity. We will pause briefly here to mark the moments in the political during which these novels were published, 1929 and 1986. These dates fall within a progression which spans the twentieth century from Taylorism-Fordism to a globalized regime of flexible accumulation. In these increasingly globalized regimes of accumulation, specific populations are targeted for into the world-system. The incorporation of the African American population, and that of other decolonized peoples, has been undertaken, however imperfectly, in a post-1914 and specially in a post-1945 global of North American ascendancy. In the incorporation of different peoples into a global economy, racism operates through what Wallerstein calls an 'ethnicization' of the work force, a process which adjusts different human genetic and social pools to the hierarchical needs of the economy at different times and in different places (Balibar 33-34). Perhaps Deleuze and Guattari come closer to the phenomenon being addressed here in their assertion that racism operates by the determination of of in relation to the White-Man face (178); that is, the from the physiognomy of whiteness. Commenting on the above passage from Deleuze and Guattari, Michael Hardt suggests that we speak of racist practice not in terms of exclusion but as a strategy of differential (146). This strategy measures degrees of deviance along a chromatic slide, and this graded chromaticism seems to be based on a measure of mimetic efficacy. Differential inclusion inevitably seems to include those whose approximation of the physiognomy of whiteness has attained a degree of mimetic efficacy through markers of race and class. The incitement to approximation is pervasive, but equally pervasive is the imperative of distance and difference. Differential inclusion includes those whose of are muted through mimetic approximation, but whose or difference never becomes undecipherable, as undecipherable difference always provokes extreme anxieties. These are strategies for the management of otherness in a regime of globalized flexible accumulation, strategies which locate otherness contiguously on a differential grid of heterogeneity, as inalienably he same and indisputably other. In such a space, in which bodies are subject to a polymorphous incitement to approximate a physiognomy or topography of whiteness, we observe a proliferation of images of racial approximation. In Toni Morrison's work alone, we find figures of racial approximation in a succession of characters like Geraldine, Maureen, Helene, and Jadine, and Nella Larsen's Passing extends this line to Irene Redfield and Clare Kendry. If these figures are projected outward as hybrid embodiments of otherness, Clare has, in fact, become indistinguishably other. While characters like Geraldine and Helene seem to be figures of false consciousness and alienation, Clare Kendry is too conspicuously cultivated, her role too deliberately performed for her to be understood in these terms. …

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