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" Suspending the Desire for Recognition: "


Document Type : Latin Dissertation
Language of Document : English
Record Number : 904006
Doc. No : TL5vr5g2r3
Main Entry : Gonzalez, Jorge Manuel
Title & Author : Suspending the Desire for Recognition:\ Gonzalez, Jorge ManuelMaldonado-Torres, Nelson
College : UC Berkeley
Date : 2011
student score : 2011
Abstract : AbstractSuspending the Desire for Recognition: Coloniality of Being, the Dialectics of Death, and Chicano/a LiteraturebyJorge Manuel GonzalezDoctor of Philosophy in Ethnic Studiesand the Designated Emphasis in Critical TheoryUniversity of California, BerkeleyProfessor Nelson Maldonado-Torres, ChairWriting, as Abdul JanMohamed posits in relation to Richard Wright's literature, is an alternative manner of negating negation. "Negating the negation" in this sense must be understood dialectically, as a methodology of the oppressed seeking to transcend social negation from a continuous colonial logic that seeks to alienate, exploit, and reify racialized existence. The function of writing for historically marginalized communities, then, is a symbolic gesture that often takes the place of the act of physical resistance seeking recognition -as the Hegelian master/bondsman or Marxist proletariat/bourgeoisie models would describe--from exterior dominating forces. The desire to be recognized is displaced by the desire to know and critique the capitalist world's oppressive forces, especially the forces of racial alienation and gender subjection. The turn to affirm the self from within is manifested in the novels, poems, and plays of people of color in the Unites States and former colonies around the world. This dissertation examines Chicana/o literature produced between 1968 to the turn of the century to deconstruct the process of racial alienation and the struggle for "dis-alienation" represented in the critical imagination of writers who occupy the position of what Ramon Grosfoguel (2005) has referred to as "colonial racial subjects." The objective is to articulate a philosophical, theoretical, and literary account of the extent and manner in which death (actual, symbolic, and social), violence, and the continuity of the logics/ethics of domination shape the existential horizon of the Chicana/o experience to establish a conceptual grounding for the "coloniality of Being." This dissertation reads how the persistence of colonial logic and the West's monopoly on the meaning and value of `Being' has a dynamic relation with figurative renderings of racialized identity, alienated labor, death, violence, love, and war by Chicano/a writers whose literary production spans from the 1970s to the turn of the 20th century. Suspending the Desire for Recognition proposes that the existential concerns and the critiques embedded within Chicana/o literature are responses to the pathology of recognition endemic to modernity, the legacies of colonialism, and its persistent logic/ethic of domination in the modern era. Understanding literature as an important tool for the critique of society, this dissertation highlights the literary production of Oscar "Zeta" Acosta, Luis J. Rodriguez, and Cherríe Moraga, key writers within the Chicano Studies canon whose autobiographies, novels, and plays help us explain the way in which death and violence are fundamental to the existential crises of Chicana/os who have lived through the socio-political realignments of the late 1960s through the present. The dissertation pays particular attention to the existential and psycho-political implications of Chicana/os subjectivities sutured in a social context which claims that the violence of racism is a problem overcome in the Civil Rights Era while institutional repression continues to subjugate Chicana/os and a rise intra-community violence is particularly evident.
Added Entry : Maldonado-Torres, Nelson
Added Entry : UC Berkeley
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