Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: From Belles to Bayous: The Fall of the South on Screen
- Section One The South in the Cultural Imaginary
- Section Two Gothic Visions, Southern Stories
- Section Three The Southern Gothic on Screen
- Section Four Case Studies: Toys in the Attic and Searching for the Wrong-Eyed Jesus
- Conclusion – Fading, But Never Faded
- Bibliography
- Filmography
- Television Series
- Songs
- Video Games
- Websites
- Index
5 - Manifesting the Other
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 September 2022
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: From Belles to Bayous: The Fall of the South on Screen
- Section One The South in the Cultural Imaginary
- Section Two Gothic Visions, Southern Stories
- Section Three The Southern Gothic on Screen
- Section Four Case Studies: Toys in the Attic and Searching for the Wrong-Eyed Jesus
- Conclusion – Fading, But Never Faded
- Bibliography
- Filmography
- Television Series
- Songs
- Video Games
- Websites
- Index
Summary
Abstract
The concept of the “Other” emerges from discursive practices whereby dominant groups seek to stigmatize difference, real or imagined, in order that the “Other” can be set apart from what is considered the “norm.” In U.S. discourse the South has been consistently othered, the consequences of which are its ideological, political, and cultural positioning as America's dark underbelly. Yet this idea of the South as Other is structured around a binary that informs Gothic representation more generally, often manifesting in the image of Gothic dualism. This chapter argues for a model of otherness that takes its cues from Aristotelian conceptualizations of otherness yet highlights the impossibility of otherness as a strict binary concept.
Keywords: The Other, Binaries, Undecidability, In-betweenness, Ontology, Dualism
As Anne Williams has noted, the Gothic has systematically structured its narratives around the concept of the Other (1995, 18). While an ever-changing set of Gothic conventions can express many dimensions of otherness, it nonetheless exists as a cognitive structure that has informed the medieval and barbarous in Walpole's Otranto (1995, 20), through to the monstrously unnatural in Stoker's Dracula (1995, 21). Notions of otherness are broadly consistent with some of the most ancient categories of otherness in Western culture and can be traced back to Pythagorean binaries – employed by Aristotle in The Metaphysics – which describe reality according to such opposites as male/female, straight/curved, right/left, light/darkness, or good/evil (Williams 1995, 18–19). Since there is a privileging in these binary categories that denotes the dominant aspect of the opposition as superior, cultural assumptions have developed in Western discourse that attribute the subordinate aspect of the opposition with a lesser status. These subordinate categories have informed the overall Gothic tendency to revel in this shadowy realm, the realm that Aristotle referred to as “the line of evil,” of which transgression and taboo seem apt manifestations (Williams 1995, 19). One of the organizing principles of The Castle of Otranto, for instance, is an otherness that positions the dark ages as a time of barbarity and superstition, set in indisputable contrast to the “enlightened and civilized” period in which the novel was produced (Williams 1995, 20). Frankenstein and Dracula similarly pivot around a binary logic which manifests as a predilection for darkness over light and thus attributes both respective figures with powerful Gothic potential through an association with the clandestine, the supernatural, and dark corrupted morality (Williams 1995, 21).
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- Information
- The American Southern Gothic on Screen , pp. 109 - 120Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2022