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The Neo-Gothic Imaginary and the Rhetoric of Loss in Colson Whitehead’s The Underground Railroad
Author(s) -
Patrycja Antoszek
Publication year - 2019
Language(s) - English
DOI - 10.7311/pjas.13/2/2019.08
Subject(s) - the imaginary , metaphor , symbol (formal) , subjectivity , narrative , rhetoric , sign (mathematics) , unconscious mind , the symbolic , underground railroad , psychoanalysis , literature , philosophy , sociology , aesthetics , art , epistemology , psychology , law , linguistics , mathematical analysis , mathematics , political science
The aim of my paper will be to discuss the African-American reworking of the Gothic tradition in Colson Whitehead’s neo-slave narrative. I want to argue that the figure of the protagonist Cora may be seen as the embodiment of losses that span over generations of black women. Cora’s melancholia is a strategy of dealing with the horrors of slavery and a sign of a black woman’s failed entry into the Symbolic. While the novel’s narrative technique is a symbol of the ever-present past that haunts black subjectivity, the underground railroad may be read as a metaphor for the repressed content of American national unconscious.

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