Autonomy and subjugation: The dynamics of emancipation and race in the writings of precolonial German women authors.

Item

Title
Autonomy and subjugation: The dynamics of emancipation and race in the writings of precolonial German women authors.
Identifier
AAI3213236
identifier
3213236
Creator
O'Brien, Traci S.
Contributor
Adviser: Tamara S. Evans
Date
2006
Language
English
Publisher
City University of New York.
Subject
Literature, Germanic | Women's Studies
Abstract
This dissertation is a study of certain contradictions in texts written by three authors of the nineteenth century, Ida von Hahn-Hahn (1805-1880), Fanny Lewald (1811-1889) and Ottilie Assing (1819-1884). The seeming discrepancy between the general enlightenment principles of their work and their position vis-a-vis the racial Other is at the center of my exploration. My position in this dissertation is that it is not possible to discuss their emancipatory ideas separate from their racializing metaphors. In fact, such metaphors are vital to their articulation of progress and emancipation. The discursive context of precolonial Germany can in part explain the relationship between these two seemingly contradictory strands.;I assert that previous theoretical perspectives fall short in assessing the contribution of emancipatory women authors of the nineteenth century, such as Hahn-Hahn, Lewald and Assing, either because they do not engage with women authors at all or because they tend to view women authors as "feminist" or "masculinist." If even considered, then, women authors are either deemed resistant to a dominant, patriarchal discourse or as complicit in such discourse. In both cases, the discursive exercise of power is defined as "masculinist," and neither case allows for an active assertion or textual articulation of female autonomy.;It is the assertion of this dissertation that in order to fully appreciate the contribution of nineteenth-century German women's writing, one needs a more comprehensive theory that combines aspects of both approaches. The fact that Hahn-Hahn, Lewald, and Assing strive to live up to enlightened ideals while at the same time participate in a racializing discourse, demands that such a perspective be utilized.;For a theoretical starting point, I rely on the discussions of "colonial fantasies" advanced by both Susanne Zantop and Meyda Yegenoglu. Such a foundation allows me to examine the works of these nineteenth-century women authors for the subjugation of a variety of "Others," such as the Oriental, the African-American, the Chinese American and the Native American. At the same time, however, the definition of precolonial needs to be expanded: the very existence of the works under consideration here demonstrates that the scope of what has previously been understood as "precolonial" has been too narrow.
Type
dissertation
Source
PQT Legacy CUNY.xlsx
degree
Ph.D.
Item sets
CUNY Legacy ETDs