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AWEJ for Translation & Literary Studies, Volume3, Number1. February 2019                           Pp. 178-189

Self-Abdication and Otherness in Philip Roth’s The Human Stain (2000)

Department of English, Faculty of Arts and Languages
University of Bejaia,, Bejaia, Algeria

Department of English, Faculty of Arts and Languages
University of Bejaia, Bejaia, Algeria

 

Abstract:

Abstract PDF

Identity, in one of its understanding, signifies a set of characteristics that make up a person’s ethical faithfulness to, identification with, and pride of one’s origin, tradition, and culture. Remaining true to one’s identity and being faithful to the core values of one’s culture is a complicated matter when it comes to a black living in white society like America, where color and racial identity are rudimentary prerequisites in self-definition and naming. Philip Roth’s novel entitled The Human   Stain (2000) shows how some black figures undress their black identity to wear the prestigious       white one to go onward with life as full selves, to have access to all the privileges the whites enjoy,  and, above all, to live without the specter of race and the decisiveness of epidermal signs. The novel calls into question and revision such essentialist notions as other, class,andrace by describing the crises the subject or self undergoes in the light of racial prejudices, center-periphery relations, and class stereotypes. The present paper, then, addresses the act of self-abdication the protagonist, Silk Coleman, carries out to overstep the feeling of otherness and to dodge racial discrimination. The paper looks into the notions of selfhood and Otherness by negotiating the definition of the self and the distortion it undergoes in its encounter with the Other . The study aims at revealing, primarily, the effects of Black racial-passing, a common phenomenon in American society of the first half of the twentieth century, on familial relationships and cultural heritage.  It also reveals the weight of gender and class discrimination in the individual’s identity formation and well-being.

Cite as:

Mohdeb, A., & Mammeri, S. (2019). Self-Abdication and Otherness in Philip Roth’s The Human Stain (2000). Arab World English Journal for Translation & Literary Studies, 3 (1) 178-189.

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Assia Mohdeb is Assistant Professor of Literature in the Department of English at Bejaia
University, Algeria. Her research interests include Anglo-American Literatures, African
Literature, Literary Stylistics, and Literary Criticism. She teaches several graduate & postgraduate
courses such as Anglo-Saxon Literature, Culture & Civilization, and Literary Theory. She is
supervising M.A. Theses in Literature & Civilization. Also, she has presented many papers in national and international conferences and workshops. Similarly, she published some papers in
national and international scientific journals. Currently, Assia is working on a Ph.D. in Postmodern
Literature. https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7935-9961

Sofiane Mammeri is Assistant Professor of Sociolinguistics in the Department of English at the
University of Bejaia, Algeria. His research interests include Sociolinguistics, Theoretical
Linguistics, Discourse Analysis, Supra-segmental Phonology, and Translation Studies. He teaches
several graduate & post graduate courses such as Phonetics & Phonology, Sociolinguistics, and
Discourse Analysis. He is supervising M.A. Theses in Applied Linguistics. Also, he has presented
many papers in national and international conferences and workshops. Similarly, he published
some papers in national and international scientific journals. Currently, Sofiane is working on a
Ph.D. in Sociolinguistics. https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0444-2725