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Race, Romanticism, and the Politics of Feminist Literary Study: Harriet Prescott Spofford's "The Amber Gods"

If the story consistently links the domestic and linguistic transgressions of both [Giorgione Willoughby] and her family's legendary slave to the color yellow, these emphatically racialized links are nonetheless peculiarly ambiguous about specific ethnic categories. Although of Italian descent,...

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Published in:Legacy (Amherst, Mass.) Mass.), 2001-01, Vol.18 (1), p.35-51
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description If the story consistently links the domestic and linguistic transgressions of both [Giorgione Willoughby] and her family's legendary slave to the color yellow, these emphatically racialized links are nonetheless peculiarly ambiguous about specific ethnic categories. Although of Italian descent, Giorgione repeatedly describes herself as "yellow," deeper in color than other New England women. For Giorgione, her epidermis warrants permission to talk and behave with an exoticized sensuality that exceeds cultural norms. In order to reap the benefits of such Othering, the text effects some rather curious contortions. For example, the narrator's "yellow" color is linked to Italy and the tropics, especially the West Indies, rather than Asia. She relates that "when I reached the islands my sight was as clear as my skin; all that tropical luxuriance snatched me to itself at once, recognized me for kith and kin" (46). Perhaps the safety of an insistently Italian heritage and ethnicity enables the otherwise dangerous use of "skin" and "kin" to suggest Giorgione's affinity with West Indian natives. Her skin color denotes a visible consonance with the tropical climate's native inhabitants and their presumed luxurious exoticism, an Otherness based in racial essentialism; at the same time, this Otherness is offset -- made safe, if you will -- by her clearly European ancestry. The linkage of "skin" and "kin" is consistent with late-eighteenth- and nineteenth-century scientific theories about race. According to Robyn Wiegman, "As late as the 1840s and 1850s, in fact, the preeminent authority on race in the states was still Samuel Stanhope Smith," who in 1787 wrote a "theoretical treatise on the origin of race, which he posited as climate and custom" (34). Stanhope's theory advances "race" as a scientific fact rooted at once in the observer's reading of behavior (culture) and skin (climate). Selectively appropriated by the narrator, these theories about race offer her a culturally acceptable device for asserting a privileged difference from white women and women of color. Sander Gilman observes that "one of the black servant's central functions in the visual arts of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries was to sexualize the society in which he or she is found" (228). Operating in similar structural fashion, the alliance of the beautiful Giorgione with the Willoughby slave's ambiguous ethnicity accomplishes several ends. First, the exoticization of Giorgione through the pre
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Although of Italian descent, Giorgione repeatedly describes herself as "yellow," deeper in color than other New England women. For Giorgione, her epidermis warrants permission to talk and behave with an exoticized sensuality that exceeds cultural norms. In order to reap the benefits of such Othering, the text effects some rather curious contortions. For example, the narrator's "yellow" color is linked to Italy and the tropics, especially the West Indies, rather than Asia. She relates that "when I reached the islands my sight was as clear as my skin; all that tropical luxuriance snatched me to itself at once, recognized me for kith and kin" (46). Perhaps the safety of an insistently Italian heritage and ethnicity enables the otherwise dangerous use of "skin" and "kin" to suggest Giorgione's affinity with West Indian natives. Her skin color denotes a visible consonance with the tropical climate's native inhabitants and their presumed luxurious exoticism, an Otherness based in racial essentialism; at the same time, this Otherness is offset -- made safe, if you will -- by her clearly European ancestry. The linkage of "skin" and "kin" is consistent with late-eighteenth- and nineteenth-century scientific theories about race. According to Robyn Wiegman, "As late as the 1840s and 1850s, in fact, the preeminent authority on race in the states was still Samuel Stanhope Smith," who in 1787 wrote a "theoretical treatise on the origin of race, which he posited as climate and custom" (34). Stanhope's theory advances "race" as a scientific fact rooted at once in the observer's reading of behavior (culture) and skin (climate). Selectively appropriated by the narrator, these theories about race offer her a culturally acceptable device for asserting a privileged difference from white women and women of color. Sander Gilman observes that "one of the black servant's central functions in the visual arts of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries was to sexualize the society in which he or she is found" (228). Operating in similar structural fashion, the alliance of the beautiful Giorgione with the Willoughby slave's ambiguous ethnicity accomplishes several ends. First, the exoticization of Giorgione through the presence of a racialized Other may address the problem faced by Anglo-American nineteenth-century authors of portraying a sympathetic black body.(14) Perhaps a light-skinned Other was more palatable to readers. Next, the sensuality of what Amy Ling calls the "exotic, inscrutable, mysterious oriental" is displaced onto the Anglo-Italian-American body of the heroine (143).(15) By contrast, the body of "little Asian" is emphatically asexual; described as malformed, ugly, and insane, she is by turns too young or too old to invoke such associations in [Elizabeth K. Harriet Prescott Spofford]'s readers. The ambiguity of ethnic associations -- Giorgione's skin color is associated with Asia, Italy, and the West Indian planter as well as slave classes -- seems to invoke vaguely even as it directly avoids specific arguments about African American slavery and the growing presence of Asian immigrants that were dividing the United States.(16) Even so, the Asian slave and those sexually transgressive qualities she may have conjured in nineteenth-century readers' minds are mapped onto the body of Giorgione, shifting and making more appealing to a culture of white middle-class readers the racialized connotations of "yellow." Unlike the brown-skinned Willoughby slave or pale and boring cousin [Louise] and similar Victorian "wax dolls," Giorgione is shockingly, vibrantly, and sensually alive. To be yellow is to have "delicious curves," "perfect roundings, flexible mouldings" and melting lips (38). She is like "wild honey," a "West Indian magnolia" and Cleopatra (39, 48). Amber suits her because it is "not dyed, but created" (38); in other words, like the sensuality of Giorgione herself and the racialized Other who confers it, amber is "natural." Her expressive sensuality reflects what Edward Said has described as Orientalism in Western cultural assumptions about the carnal nature and sexual availability of women of color.(17) Indolent, luxurious, tropical, Romanized, and undomestic, the protagonist is a fascinatingly "great creature without a soul" (56).</description><identifier>ISSN: 0748-4321</identifier><identifier>ISSN: 1534-0643</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 1534-0643</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.1353/leg.2001.0006</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press</publisher><subject>19th century ; 19th century AD ; Aesthetics ; African Americans ; Ambiguity ; Color ; Connotation ; Consonance ; Criticism and interpretation ; Cultural heritage ; Cultural history ; Culture ; Douglass, Frederick (1818-1895) ; Fear ; Feminism ; Feminist criticism ; Feminist literary criticism ; Human relations ; Immigrants ; Imperialism ; Interpersonal communication ; Italian language ; Legacies ; Lips ; Literature ; Minority &amp; ethnic groups ; Narratives ; Otherness ; Personal relationships ; Politics ; Romantic art ; Romanticism ; Slavery ; Slaves ; Spofford, Harriet Elizabeth Prescott ; White people ; Women ; Women authors ; Women writers</subject><ispartof>Legacy (Amherst, Mass.), 2001-01, Vol.18 (1), p.35-51</ispartof><rights>2001 University of Nebraska Press</rights><rights>Copyright © 2001 The University of Nebraska.</rights><rights>COPYRIGHT 2001 University of Nebraska Press</rights><rights>Copyright University of Nebraska Press Apr 30, 2001</rights><lds50>peer_reviewed</lds50><woscitedreferencessubscribed>false</woscitedreferencessubscribed><citedby>FETCH-LOGICAL-c461t-1dbce78634da938c24c2f8bb0a450ae5681b16afc42b58c80fde6be0499461e03</citedby></display><links><openurl>$$Topenurl_article</openurl><openurlfulltext>$$Topenurlfull_article</openurlfulltext><thumbnail>$$Tsyndetics_thumb_exl</thumbnail><linktopdf>$$Uhttps://www.jstor.org/stable/pdf/25679352$$EPDF$$P50$$Gjstor$$H</linktopdf><linktohtml>$$Uhttps://www.proquest.com/docview/223834290?pq-origsite=primo$$EHTML$$P50$$Gproquest$$H</linktohtml><link.rule.ids>314,780,784,27924,27925,58238,58471,62661,62662,62677</link.rule.ids></links><search><creatorcontrib>LOGAN, LISA M.</creatorcontrib><title>Race, Romanticism, and the Politics of Feminist Literary Study: Harriet Prescott Spofford's "The Amber Gods"</title><title>Legacy (Amherst, Mass.)</title><addtitle>Legacy: A Journal of American Women Writers</addtitle><description>If the story consistently links the domestic and linguistic transgressions of both [Giorgione Willoughby] and her family's legendary slave to the color yellow, these emphatically racialized links are nonetheless peculiarly ambiguous about specific ethnic categories. Although of Italian descent, Giorgione repeatedly describes herself as "yellow," deeper in color than other New England women. For Giorgione, her epidermis warrants permission to talk and behave with an exoticized sensuality that exceeds cultural norms. In order to reap the benefits of such Othering, the text effects some rather curious contortions. For example, the narrator's "yellow" color is linked to Italy and the tropics, especially the West Indies, rather than Asia. She relates that "when I reached the islands my sight was as clear as my skin; all that tropical luxuriance snatched me to itself at once, recognized me for kith and kin" (46). Perhaps the safety of an insistently Italian heritage and ethnicity enables the otherwise dangerous use of "skin" and "kin" to suggest Giorgione's affinity with West Indian natives. Her skin color denotes a visible consonance with the tropical climate's native inhabitants and their presumed luxurious exoticism, an Otherness based in racial essentialism; at the same time, this Otherness is offset -- made safe, if you will -- by her clearly European ancestry. The linkage of "skin" and "kin" is consistent with late-eighteenth- and nineteenth-century scientific theories about race. According to Robyn Wiegman, "As late as the 1840s and 1850s, in fact, the preeminent authority on race in the states was still Samuel Stanhope Smith," who in 1787 wrote a "theoretical treatise on the origin of race, which he posited as climate and custom" (34). Stanhope's theory advances "race" as a scientific fact rooted at once in the observer's reading of behavior (culture) and skin (climate). Selectively appropriated by the narrator, these theories about race offer her a culturally acceptable device for asserting a privileged difference from white women and women of color. Sander Gilman observes that "one of the black servant's central functions in the visual arts of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries was to sexualize the society in which he or she is found" (228). Operating in similar structural fashion, the alliance of the beautiful Giorgione with the Willoughby slave's ambiguous ethnicity accomplishes several ends. First, the exoticization of Giorgione through the presence of a racialized Other may address the problem faced by Anglo-American nineteenth-century authors of portraying a sympathetic black body.(14) Perhaps a light-skinned Other was more palatable to readers. Next, the sensuality of what Amy Ling calls the "exotic, inscrutable, mysterious oriental" is displaced onto the Anglo-Italian-American body of the heroine (143).(15) By contrast, the body of "little Asian" is emphatically asexual; described as malformed, ugly, and insane, she is by turns too young or too old to invoke such associations in [Elizabeth K. Harriet Prescott Spofford]'s readers. The ambiguity of ethnic associations -- Giorgione's skin color is associated with Asia, Italy, and the West Indian planter as well as slave classes -- seems to invoke vaguely even as it directly avoids specific arguments about African American slavery and the growing presence of Asian immigrants that were dividing the United States.(16) Even so, the Asian slave and those sexually transgressive qualities she may have conjured in nineteenth-century readers' minds are mapped onto the body of Giorgione, shifting and making more appealing to a culture of white middle-class readers the racialized connotations of "yellow." Unlike the brown-skinned Willoughby slave or pale and boring cousin [Louise] and similar Victorian "wax dolls," Giorgione is shockingly, vibrantly, and sensually alive. To be yellow is to have "delicious curves," "perfect roundings, flexible mouldings" and melting lips (38). She is like "wild honey," a "West Indian magnolia" and Cleopatra (39, 48). Amber suits her because it is "not dyed, but created" (38); in other words, like the sensuality of Giorgione herself and the racialized Other who confers it, amber is "natural." Her expressive sensuality reflects what Edward Said has described as Orientalism in Western cultural assumptions about the carnal nature and sexual availability of women of color.(17) Indolent, luxurious, tropical, Romanized, and undomestic, the protagonist is a fascinatingly "great creature without a soul" (56).</description><subject>19th century</subject><subject>19th century AD</subject><subject>Aesthetics</subject><subject>African Americans</subject><subject>Ambiguity</subject><subject>Color</subject><subject>Connotation</subject><subject>Consonance</subject><subject>Criticism and interpretation</subject><subject>Cultural heritage</subject><subject>Cultural history</subject><subject>Culture</subject><subject>Douglass, Frederick (1818-1895)</subject><subject>Fear</subject><subject>Feminism</subject><subject>Feminist criticism</subject><subject>Feminist literary criticism</subject><subject>Human relations</subject><subject>Immigrants</subject><subject>Imperialism</subject><subject>Interpersonal communication</subject><subject>Italian language</subject><subject>Legacies</subject><subject>Lips</subject><subject>Literature</subject><subject>Minority &amp; 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ethnic groups</topic><topic>Narratives</topic><topic>Otherness</topic><topic>Personal relationships</topic><topic>Politics</topic><topic>Romantic art</topic><topic>Romanticism</topic><topic>Slavery</topic><topic>Slaves</topic><topic>Spofford, Harriet Elizabeth Prescott</topic><topic>White people</topic><topic>Women</topic><topic>Women authors</topic><topic>Women writers</topic><toplevel>peer_reviewed</toplevel><toplevel>online_resources</toplevel><creatorcontrib>LOGAN, LISA M.</creatorcontrib><collection>CrossRef</collection><collection>Gale In Context: High School</collection><collection>Gale In Context: Canada</collection><collection>Gale Literature Resource Center</collection><collection>ProQuest Central (Corporate)</collection><collection>Docstoc</collection><collection>University Readers</collection><collection>GenderWatch (ProQuest)</collection><collection>ProQuest Central (purchase pre-March 2016)</collection><collection>GenderWatch (Alumni Edition)</collection><collection>ProQuest Central (Alumni) (purchase pre-March 2016)</collection><collection>Research Library (Alumni Edition)</collection><collection>ProQuest Central (Alumni)</collection><collection>ProQuest Central</collection><collection>ProQuest One Literature</collection><collection>ProQuest Central Essentials</collection><collection>eLibrary</collection><collection>AUTh Library subscriptions: ProQuest Central</collection><collection>ProQuest One Community College</collection><collection>Literature Online Core (LION Core) (legacy)</collection><collection>ProQuest Central</collection><collection>ProQuest Central Student</collection><collection>Research Library Prep</collection><collection>One Literature (ProQuest)</collection><collection>ProQuest Research Library</collection><collection>Research Library (Corporate)</collection><collection>ProQuest Learning: Literature</collection><collection>Literature Online Premium (LION Premium) (legacy)</collection><collection>ProQuest One Academic Eastern Edition (DO NOT USE)</collection><collection>ProQuest Women's &amp; Gender Studies</collection><collection>Literature Online (LION) - US Customers Only</collection><collection>ProQuest One Academic</collection><collection>ProQuest One Academic UKI Edition</collection><collection>ProQuest Central China</collection><collection>Literature Online (LION)</collection><collection>ProQuest Central Basic</collection><collection>Diversity Collection</collection><jtitle>Legacy (Amherst, Mass.)</jtitle></facets><delivery><delcategory>Remote Search Resource</delcategory><fulltext>fulltext</fulltext></delivery><addata><au>LOGAN, LISA M.</au><format>journal</format><genre>article</genre><ristype>JOUR</ristype><atitle>Race, Romanticism, and the Politics of Feminist Literary Study: Harriet Prescott Spofford's "The Amber Gods"</atitle><jtitle>Legacy (Amherst, Mass.)</jtitle><addtitle>Legacy: A Journal of American Women Writers</addtitle><date>2001-01-01</date><risdate>2001</risdate><volume>18</volume><issue>1</issue><spage>35</spage><epage>51</epage><pages>35-51</pages><issn>0748-4321</issn><issn>1534-0643</issn><eissn>1534-0643</eissn><abstract>If the story consistently links the domestic and linguistic transgressions of both [Giorgione Willoughby] and her family's legendary slave to the color yellow, these emphatically racialized links are nonetheless peculiarly ambiguous about specific ethnic categories. Although of Italian descent, Giorgione repeatedly describes herself as "yellow," deeper in color than other New England women. For Giorgione, her epidermis warrants permission to talk and behave with an exoticized sensuality that exceeds cultural norms. In order to reap the benefits of such Othering, the text effects some rather curious contortions. For example, the narrator's "yellow" color is linked to Italy and the tropics, especially the West Indies, rather than Asia. She relates that "when I reached the islands my sight was as clear as my skin; all that tropical luxuriance snatched me to itself at once, recognized me for kith and kin" (46). Perhaps the safety of an insistently Italian heritage and ethnicity enables the otherwise dangerous use of "skin" and "kin" to suggest Giorgione's affinity with West Indian natives. Her skin color denotes a visible consonance with the tropical climate's native inhabitants and their presumed luxurious exoticism, an Otherness based in racial essentialism; at the same time, this Otherness is offset -- made safe, if you will -- by her clearly European ancestry. The linkage of "skin" and "kin" is consistent with late-eighteenth- and nineteenth-century scientific theories about race. According to Robyn Wiegman, "As late as the 1840s and 1850s, in fact, the preeminent authority on race in the states was still Samuel Stanhope Smith," who in 1787 wrote a "theoretical treatise on the origin of race, which he posited as climate and custom" (34). Stanhope's theory advances "race" as a scientific fact rooted at once in the observer's reading of behavior (culture) and skin (climate). Selectively appropriated by the narrator, these theories about race offer her a culturally acceptable device for asserting a privileged difference from white women and women of color. Sander Gilman observes that "one of the black servant's central functions in the visual arts of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries was to sexualize the society in which he or she is found" (228). Operating in similar structural fashion, the alliance of the beautiful Giorgione with the Willoughby slave's ambiguous ethnicity accomplishes several ends. First, the exoticization of Giorgione through the presence of a racialized Other may address the problem faced by Anglo-American nineteenth-century authors of portraying a sympathetic black body.(14) Perhaps a light-skinned Other was more palatable to readers. Next, the sensuality of what Amy Ling calls the "exotic, inscrutable, mysterious oriental" is displaced onto the Anglo-Italian-American body of the heroine (143).(15) By contrast, the body of "little Asian" is emphatically asexual; described as malformed, ugly, and insane, she is by turns too young or too old to invoke such associations in [Elizabeth K. Harriet Prescott Spofford]'s readers. The ambiguity of ethnic associations -- Giorgione's skin color is associated with Asia, Italy, and the West Indian planter as well as slave classes -- seems to invoke vaguely even as it directly avoids specific arguments about African American slavery and the growing presence of Asian immigrants that were dividing the United States.(16) Even so, the Asian slave and those sexually transgressive qualities she may have conjured in nineteenth-century readers' minds are mapped onto the body of Giorgione, shifting and making more appealing to a culture of white middle-class readers the racialized connotations of "yellow." Unlike the brown-skinned Willoughby slave or pale and boring cousin [Louise] and similar Victorian "wax dolls," Giorgione is shockingly, vibrantly, and sensually alive. To be yellow is to have "delicious curves," "perfect roundings, flexible mouldings" and melting lips (38). She is like "wild honey," a "West Indian magnolia" and Cleopatra (39, 48). Amber suits her because it is "not dyed, but created" (38); in other words, like the sensuality of Giorgione herself and the racialized Other who confers it, amber is "natural." Her expressive sensuality reflects what Edward Said has described as Orientalism in Western cultural assumptions about the carnal nature and sexual availability of women of color.(17) Indolent, luxurious, tropical, Romanized, and undomestic, the protagonist is a fascinatingly "great creature without a soul" (56).</abstract><cop>Lincoln</cop><pub>University of Nebraska Press</pub><doi>10.1353/leg.2001.0006</doi><tpages>17</tpages></addata></record>
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subjects 19th century
19th century AD
Aesthetics
African Americans
Ambiguity
Color
Connotation
Consonance
Criticism and interpretation
Cultural heritage
Cultural history
Culture
Douglass, Frederick (1818-1895)
Fear
Feminism
Feminist criticism
Feminist literary criticism
Human relations
Immigrants
Imperialism
Interpersonal communication
Italian language
Legacies
Lips
Literature
Minority & ethnic groups
Narratives
Otherness
Personal relationships
Politics
Romantic art
Romanticism
Slavery
Slaves
Spofford, Harriet Elizabeth Prescott
White people
Women
Women authors
Women writers
title Race, Romanticism, and the Politics of Feminist Literary Study: Harriet Prescott Spofford's "The Amber Gods"
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