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“Fighting mad to tell her story”: Madness, rage and literary self-making in Jean Rhys and Jamaica Kincaid
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posted on 2023-06-07, 06:32 authored by Denise Decaires NarainThis essay explores the ways that Rhys and Kincaid mine the slippage in meanings and registers of “mad” and “madness” in their texts. Rather than reading Jean Rhys as primarily the chronicler of alienation and “terrified (white-Creole) consciousness,” I read across her autobiographical and fictional works to argue that “mad” is deployed in an energizing and critically reflective manner that suggests a more varied and nuanced attunement to the cultural and affective legacies of colonialism. Jamaica Kincaid, for her part, is frequently described as a writer propelled by fury, whose signature affect might without controversy be designated as “anger.” I argue that this emphasis on “anger” elides the other more profoundly unsettling resonances of “mad” that inform Kincaid’s oeuvre, as part of her wider project of questioning established repertoires of feeling (including “anger” and “rage”). The persistence with which autobiographical elements feature in both writers’ works attests less to a desire for “self-expression” than to a painstaking commitment to writing as a space for exploring the very possibility of selfhood. Drawing on selected works by Frantz Fanon and Judith Butler, I navigate across their respective arguments about colonial patriarchal hegemonies as a violent “disintegration” or “undoing” of the gendered, colonized “self” and consider the political and cultural implications of their insights for a reading of Rhys’s and Kincaid’s texts. Focusing on Rhys’s Smile Please: An Unfinished Autobiography (1979), “The Day They Burned the Books” (1968) and Wide Sargasso Sea (1966) alongside Kincaid’s My Brother (1998) and See Now Then (2013) as well as selected interviews, I suggest that reading these two writers in tandem allows us to nuance the meanings that have accrued to “mad” and “madness” in Caribbean literary studies. It also allows questions of authorship, authority, autobiography and gender to more fully inform prevailing understandings of “madness” in Caribbean literary culture.
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Publication status
- Published
File Version
- Accepted version
Publisher
Palgrave MacmillanExternal DOI
Page range
39-62Pages
220.0Book title
Madness in Anglophone Caribbean Literature: On the EdgePlace of publication
ChamISBN
9783319981796Series
New Caribbean StudiesDepartment affiliated with
- English Publications
Full text available
- Yes
Peer reviewed?
- Yes
Editors
Bénédicte Ledent, Evelyn O'Callaghan, Daria TuncaLegacy Posted Date
2019-05-14First Open Access (FOA) Date
2021-02-01First Compliant Deposit (FCD) Date
2019-05-10Usage metrics
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