Creole Identities and Racial/Gender Relations in - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Creole Identities and Racial/Gender Relations in

Description:

She came to England when she was sixteen and then drifted into a series of jobs ... their betting p. 24. the black's invasion p. 45 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:80
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 23
Provided by: engFj
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Creole Identities and Racial/Gender Relations in


1
Creole Identities and Racial/Gender Relations in
  • Jean Rhys's Wide Sargasso Sea
  • NY Norton, 1966 (Norton edition 1982)

2
Jean Rhyss Life (1890 -1979)
  • creole identity and a drifting life
  • born in Dominica in 1890, the daughter of a Welsh
    doctor and a white Creole mother.
  • She came to England when she was sixteen and then
    drifted into a series of jobs - chorus girl,
    mannequin, artist's model - after her father
    died. She also drifted in several cities, mostly
    in Vienna and Paris.
  • Three marriages.

3
Jean Rhyss Work
  • Start to write in her thirties
  • Discovered by Ford Madox Ford
  • Her first four novels are said to portray the
    same woman (with different names and minor
    details) at different stages of life, all
    drifting, unhappy, unstable, but with clear
    self-knowledge and understanding of others.
  • -- a self-reflection of Rhys?

4
Rhyss Work (2)
  • A break after Good Morning, Midnight,
  • 1966 made a sensational reappearance with Wide
    Sargasso Sea

5
Rhyss Self-Identity
  • Do you consider yourself a West Indian?She
    shrugged. It was such a long time ago when I
    left.
  • So you dont think of yourself as a West Indian
    writer?
  • Again she shrugged, but said nothing.
  • What about English? Do you consider yourself an
    English writer?
  • No! Im not, Im not! Im not even English.

6
Rhyss Self-Identity (2)
  • What about a French writer? I asked.
  • Again she shrugged and said nothing.
  • You have no desire to go back to Dominca?
  • Sometimes, she said.
  • David Plante Jean Rhys A Remembrance. 275-76
    Qut in Gregg.p. 1

7
Rhyss Self-Identity (3)
  • I dont belong anywhere but I get very worked up
    about the West Indies. I still care. . . .
  • After reading a critique of Wide Sargarso Sea. .
    ., Rhys complains. . . Again I am in danger of
    really becoming a recruit. . .I think being born
    in the West Indies is an influence very strong
    but . . . (Gregg 2 underline added)

8
Rhys on Jane Erye
  • The creole in Charlotte Brontes novel is a lay
    figure -- repulsive which does not matter, and
    not once alive which does. . . . For me . . .
    she must be right on stage. She must be at least
    plausible with a past, the reason why Mr.
    Rochester treats her so abominably and feels
    justified, and the reason why he thinks she is
    mad and why of course she goes mad, even the
    reason why she tries to set everything on fire,
    and eventually succeeds. . . (Gregg 82)

9
Rhys on Antoinettes historical background
  • I. Shift of dates
  • Jane Eyre -- towards the end of the novel reads a
    book published in 1808
  • Bertha confined in the attic in the first decade
    of the 19th century.
  • WSSs time frame shifted to 1830s onwards
  • Emancipation Act 1833
  • Antoinette -- a child in the 1840s
  • II. more than one Antoinette then.

10
Jean Rhys Major Themes
  • Post-Emancipation Racial relationships -- among
    the black Caribbean, the Creoles, and the
    English.
  • Gender relationships -- halfway house(p. 96)
    marriage and inheritance
  • Their influence on
  • Annette and then Antoinette,
  • Antoinette relationship with Tia,
  • Antoinette and Rochester
  • The madness?

11
WSS Settings
  • Part I (Martinique), Jamaica Coulibri estate,
    near Spanish Town Part II Granbois, Dominica,
  • Part III Great House England

12
Wide Sargasso Sea Major Characters
  • Characers Christophine, Tia, Amelie,
  • Antoinette, later Bertha Cosway Mason Rochester.
  • Annette
    Antoinette

The Cosways Mr. Cosway, Pierre Daniel
Father E. Rochester
The Masons Richard Aunt Cora
13
Creole Identities and Racial/Gender Relations in
Wide Sargasso Sea
  • Backgrounds on Race I. white masters, New Old
  • Mr. Luttrells p. 17 death of Mr. Lutrell
  • p. 26 (New masters after the Emancipation of
    slaves)
  • Mr. Mason -- p. 32 p. 35
  • II. White against creole e.g. p. 17 Aunt Coras
    husband 30
  • III. Black against creole poor white
    cockcroaches p. 23

14
Backgrounds (II)
  • Background on Gender revealed through letters and
    conversation
  • about the Cosways p. 28-29 Daniel Cosways
    letter pp. 96-99
  • about Masons marriage 29-30
  • Gender Rochesters Marriage and Inheritance p.
    70 114

15
  • Questions
  • How do these racial problems influence Annette
    and Antoinette?
  • 1. Annette--What does she want? P. 18
  • Why is she aloof from Antoinette? pp. 20 22
    26-27
  • 2. Antoinette -- How is she different from her
    mother? How does she survive? What do her
    dreams mean?

16
Creole Identities and Race Relations inJean
Rhys's Wide Sargasso Sea
  • Female Creole Identities
  • Annette
  • the horse p. 18/10
  • her son p. 19/11
  • her views of Godfry and Sass p. 22/12
  • gay and a good dancer 29
  • Annette vs. Mr. Mason -- p. 32/19 p. 35/20
  • Coco p. 41/22
  • What happened to her afterwards? P. 130- 134/78

17
Creole Identities and Race Relations inJean
Rhys's Wide Sargasso Sea
  • Antoinette
  • the garden 19/ 10
  • reaction to the death of the horse
  • need of her mother p. 22/ rejection by her p.
    26 27
  • refuge in nature p. 23/13 solitude 28 /16
  • her dreams p. 26/15 pp. 59-60
  • the second refuge in the convent p. 53 55 57
  • death impulse p. 92

18
  • Questions II
  • Relationships Antoinette and Christophine?
  • And Conflicts between Antoinette and Tia?

19
  • Antoinette with the other Jamaicans
  • the way to the convent pp. 48
  • Sandi
  • Antoinette and Christophine pp. 20-21 31

20
Creole Identities and Race Relations inJean
Rhys's Wide Sargasso Sea
  • Antoinette and Tia
  • p. 23
  • their betting p. 24
  • the blacks invasion p. 45

21
Part II Causes for the conflicts between
Rochester and Antoinette
  • 1. Race different cultural backgrounds
  • --her limited understanding of the world --
  • -- p. 55 Is it true,' she said, that England
    is like a dream? p. 89 blanks in his mind 76
  • 2. Gender Rochester's motivation for getting
    married not yet p. 77 p. 89, 90 not love her,
    93
  • 3. Race Gender the letter from Daniel
  • Rochester's suspicion of Antoinettes
    madness

22
Part II Causes for the conflicts between
Rochester and Antoinette (2)
  • Gender 5. Rochester's self-centeredness and
    possessiveness p. 94 the priest's ruined
    house--Pere Lilievre--Pere Labat -- self-centered
    103
  • Race Gender 6. Antoinette's temperament--sense
    of doom and insecurity
  • Race Gender 7. Antoinettes seeking for help
    from Christophine
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com