Abstract

Representing middle-class, moral African Americans in Contending Forces: A Romance Illustrative of Negro Life North and South (1900), Pauline E. Hopkins challenged mainstream race discourses that maintained Jim Crow's social and political inequalities. With one eye on that social work, critics have singled out Hopkins's narrative and thematic achievements in novel--her first, and only one published as a novel rather than serially. But scholars have also criticized Contending Forces both before and since it was republished in 1988 Schomburg Library of Nineteenth-Century Black Women Writers, arguing that novel insufficiently challenged a white patriarchal hegemony. Her female characters are too submissive, they charge, as conventional marriage plot subsumes almost all of Hopkins's women. Critics also read novel as implicitly arguing an assimilationist politics because her Black characters--many of whom are mulatto--are too physically and socially white. [1] Still, given turn-of-the-century race, gender, and sexual politics, we can recognize that Hopkins's attempts to destabilize primary social categories of race and gender, and to challenge sexual mores, pushed socio-cultural limits that white patriarchal hegemony needed desperately to maintain. As Elizabeth Ammons has insightfully noted in Afterword of first scholarly book dedicated solely to Hopkins, principles operating in Hopkins's work are her venturesomeness, defiance of categories, resistance to received tradition, and determination to articulate new forms not to contain stories but to release new and paradigms (212). Such resistance is not surprising given that Hopkins wrote in a turbulent era, when lynchings grew horrifyingly numerous as a (white) attempt to control both race and sexuality, and when a burgeoning rhetoric of biological difference imagined through a dichotomy of white superiority and Black inferiority found new fire in discourses of eugenics, i mmigrant exclusion, doctrine of separate but equal, Egyptology, and psychology. [2] Writing in this milieu and through a national discourse that had long understood metaphoric and actual importance of the family in (re)producing white patriarchal hegemony and in maintaining control of property through lines of descent, Hopkins attempted to reconstitute a national identity by providing new possibilities and paradigms that erased race- and gender-based inequalities and complicated tangled threads of familial relationships and inheritance. [3] As she wrote in her Preface to Contending Forces, novel is a simple, homely tale, unassumingly told, which cements bonds of brotherhood among all classes and complexions. Fiction is of great value to any people as a preserver of manners and customs--religious, political, and social. It is a record of growth and development from to generation (13-14). Hopkins recognized that divided American house must be reunited to stand because U.S. was historically and undeniably a homestead of mixed heritage. The novel itself also recognizes U.S. as an estate whose prosperity required equally both its male and female caretakers. Thus, while Contending Forces is laudable for its challenge to national hegemonic definitions of race and sexuality, as critics have noted, novel is all more fascinating because of how Hopkins represents issues of race and sexual morality as inherently connected to each other and to issues of property and inheritance. Race and sexual morality, like forms of tangible property such as money and estate, have value as forms of intangible property that can be conferred, retained, stolen, and reclaimed. Given then ongoing debate between political camps of Booker T. Washington and W. E. B. Du Bois, turning partially on extent to which material gain and accumulation of property were necessary for racial uplift, Hopkins's emphasis on issues of property was quite pertinent, though largely ignored. …

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