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      텍스트로부터 컨텍스트로 = From Text to Context: Teaching Kate Chopin's "Désirée s Baby" Side by Side with Charles Chesnutt's "The Sheriff s Children"

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      https://www.riss.kr/link?id=A100261329

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      다국어 초록 (Multilingual Abstract) kakao i 다국어 번역

      Kate Chopin's "Désirée's Baby" has long been an anthology favorite: it is short, intriguing, skillfully written, and challenging in its questioning of the racial caste system based on skin color. It is always a reliable choice whether in an English 101 or in a more advanced American literature course, drawing spirited responses from students. Yet to make a good thing even better, I teach "Désirée's Baby" together with "The Sheriff's Children" by Charles W. Chesnutt (1858-1932). Besides being a great occasion to introduce an African-America author who has joined the canon relatively recently, Chesnutt's story creates good synergy with "Désirée's Baby", one expediting the understanding of the other, more than doubling the impact of reading, and animating class discussions.
      Rather unusually for a Chopin story, "Désirée's Baby" has a fairytale atmosphere. Set in unspecified, faraway days of ante-bellum South, it is a story of a foundling adopted by an aristocratic planter family to grow up like a beautiful princess and be married to a even more illustrious house with "the oldest and proudest name in Louisiana." Of course, these are to offset the reversal of fortune at the end of the story all the more forcibly. Still, this uncharacteristic fairytale atmosphere along with Chopin's characteristic subtlety and suggestive, rather than descriptive, style that leaves a lot to the reader's imagination makes "Désirée's Baby" fall a little short of driving home all the horrors of slavery, especially to Korean student not well-versed in American history. In contrast, the realistic "Sheriff's Children" both shows and tells in no uncertain terms the rampant discrimination and violence against men of color: in "The Sheriff's Children," Chesnutt switched to a more direct protest and consciousness-raising from the roundabout way of parody and gentle poking fun in his earlier, popular story collection, The Conjure Woman (1899). As a result, "The Sheriff's Children" describes in greater details the evils of slavery and its aftermath, fleshing out where they are only delicately hinted at in "Désirée's Baby."
      Also, teaching "Désirée's Baby" in conjunction with "The Sheriff's Children" can lead to an overview, however brief, of the slavery in America. "The Sheriff's Children" is set in the Reconstruction-era ten years after the Civil War, to be more precise when the original dynamic of the Reconstruction already started to be undermined, while lynching and bullying of the "freedmen" grew rampant in the South. Publishing after the 1896 Plessy v. Fergurson ruling, Chesnutt superimposes on the 1870s setting of "The Sheriff's Children" the predicaments of the people of color up to the 1890s. Given the ante-bellum background of "Désirée's Baby," reading it together with "The Sheriff's Children" thus offers an opportunity to survey the history of slavery and racial discrimination from the early decades of nineteenth century to its very end or even beyond. Granted, today's Korean students are not as knowledgeable as they should be in the history of American slavery or slavery in general, for that matter but they at least know of the Civil War, President Lincoln and the Proclamation of Emancipation; and after that, Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Civil Right Movements of the mid-twentieth century. To round off the "Désirée's Baby" and "The Sheriff's Children" session, I ask students to fill the lacunae in their knowledge. Whether the result of the assignment is a sweeping bird's eye view or a thumbnail sketch, it gives them a chance to learn the tortured history of how the African Americans suffered under the yoke of slavery, regained their freedom, civil rights, and equality before the law only to be robbed them again, and how they struggled and is still struggling to re-regain what is only due to them as human beings.
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      Kate Chopin's "Désirée's Baby" has long been an anthology favorite: it is short, intriguing, skillfully written, and challenging in its questioning of the racial caste system based on skin color. It is always a reliable choice whether in...

      Kate Chopin's "Désirée's Baby" has long been an anthology favorite: it is short, intriguing, skillfully written, and challenging in its questioning of the racial caste system based on skin color. It is always a reliable choice whether in an English 101 or in a more advanced American literature course, drawing spirited responses from students. Yet to make a good thing even better, I teach "Désirée's Baby" together with "The Sheriff's Children" by Charles W. Chesnutt (1858-1932). Besides being a great occasion to introduce an African-America author who has joined the canon relatively recently, Chesnutt's story creates good synergy with "Désirée's Baby", one expediting the understanding of the other, more than doubling the impact of reading, and animating class discussions.
      Rather unusually for a Chopin story, "Désirée's Baby" has a fairytale atmosphere. Set in unspecified, faraway days of ante-bellum South, it is a story of a foundling adopted by an aristocratic planter family to grow up like a beautiful princess and be married to a even more illustrious house with "the oldest and proudest name in Louisiana." Of course, these are to offset the reversal of fortune at the end of the story all the more forcibly. Still, this uncharacteristic fairytale atmosphere along with Chopin's characteristic subtlety and suggestive, rather than descriptive, style that leaves a lot to the reader's imagination makes "Désirée's Baby" fall a little short of driving home all the horrors of slavery, especially to Korean student not well-versed in American history. In contrast, the realistic "Sheriff's Children" both shows and tells in no uncertain terms the rampant discrimination and violence against men of color: in "The Sheriff's Children," Chesnutt switched to a more direct protest and consciousness-raising from the roundabout way of parody and gentle poking fun in his earlier, popular story collection, The Conjure Woman (1899). As a result, "The Sheriff's Children" describes in greater details the evils of slavery and its aftermath, fleshing out where they are only delicately hinted at in "Désirée's Baby."
      Also, teaching "Désirée's Baby" in conjunction with "The Sheriff's Children" can lead to an overview, however brief, of the slavery in America. "The Sheriff's Children" is set in the Reconstruction-era ten years after the Civil War, to be more precise when the original dynamic of the Reconstruction already started to be undermined, while lynching and bullying of the "freedmen" grew rampant in the South. Publishing after the 1896 Plessy v. Fergurson ruling, Chesnutt superimposes on the 1870s setting of "The Sheriff's Children" the predicaments of the people of color up to the 1890s. Given the ante-bellum background of "Désirée's Baby," reading it together with "The Sheriff's Children" thus offers an opportunity to survey the history of slavery and racial discrimination from the early decades of nineteenth century to its very end or even beyond. Granted, today's Korean students are not as knowledgeable as they should be in the history of American slavery or slavery in general, for that matter but they at least know of the Civil War, President Lincoln and the Proclamation of Emancipation; and after that, Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Civil Right Movements of the mid-twentieth century. To round off the "Désirée's Baby" and "The Sheriff's Children" session, I ask students to fill the lacunae in their knowledge. Whether the result of the assignment is a sweeping bird's eye view or a thumbnail sketch, it gives them a chance to learn the tortured history of how the African Americans suffered under the yoke of slavery, regained their freedom, civil rights, and equality before the law only to be robbed them again, and how they struggled and is still struggling to re-regain what is only due to them as human beings.

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      목차 (Table of Contents)

      • 인용문헌
      • Abstract
      • 인용문헌
      • Abstract
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      참고문헌 (Reference)

      1 Haslam, Gerald W., "‘The Sheriff’s Children’: Chestnut’s Tragic Racial Parable" 2 (2): 21-26, 1968

      2 Elfenbein, Anna Shannon, "Women on the Color Line: Evolving Stereotypes and the Writings of George Washington Cable, Grace King, Kate Chopin" UP of Virginia 1989

      3 Knadler, Stephen, "Untragic Mulatto: Charles Chesnutt and the Discourse of Whiteness" 8 (8): 426-448, 1996

      4 Sundquist, Eric J., "To Wake the Nations: Race in the Making of American Literature" Belknap Press of Harvard UP 1993

      5 Andrews, William L., "The Literary Career of Charles W. Chesnutt" Louisiana State UP 1980

      6 McLemee, Scott, "The Anger and the Irony: Charles Chesnutt, the First Black Novelist, Regains His Former Glory" Chronicle of Higher Education

      7 Duncan, Charles, "The Absent Man: The Narrative Craft of Charles W. Chesnutt" Ohio UP 1998

      8 Chesnutt, Charles W., "Selected Writings" Houghton Mifflin 2001

      9 Erickson, Jon, "Modes of Narrative: Approaches to Canadian, American, and British Fiction" Kőnigshausen & Neuman 57-67, 1990

      10 Peel, Ellen, "Louisiana Women Writers: New Essays and a Comprehensive Bibliography" Louisiana State UP 57-73, 1992

      1 Haslam, Gerald W., "‘The Sheriff’s Children’: Chestnut’s Tragic Racial Parable" 2 (2): 21-26, 1968

      2 Elfenbein, Anna Shannon, "Women on the Color Line: Evolving Stereotypes and the Writings of George Washington Cable, Grace King, Kate Chopin" UP of Virginia 1989

      3 Knadler, Stephen, "Untragic Mulatto: Charles Chesnutt and the Discourse of Whiteness" 8 (8): 426-448, 1996

      4 Sundquist, Eric J., "To Wake the Nations: Race in the Making of American Literature" Belknap Press of Harvard UP 1993

      5 Andrews, William L., "The Literary Career of Charles W. Chesnutt" Louisiana State UP 1980

      6 McLemee, Scott, "The Anger and the Irony: Charles Chesnutt, the First Black Novelist, Regains His Former Glory" Chronicle of Higher Education

      7 Duncan, Charles, "The Absent Man: The Narrative Craft of Charles W. Chesnutt" Ohio UP 1998

      8 Chesnutt, Charles W., "Selected Writings" Houghton Mifflin 2001

      9 Erickson, Jon, "Modes of Narrative: Approaches to Canadian, American, and British Fiction" Kőnigshausen & Neuman 57-67, 1990

      10 Peel, Ellen, "Louisiana Women Writers: New Essays and a Comprehensive Bibliography" Louisiana State UP 57-73, 1992

      11 Toth, Emily, "Kate Chopin: The Life of the Author of “The Awakening”" William Morrow 1990

      12 Chopin, Kate, "Kate Chopin: Complete Novels and Stories" Library Classics 2002

      13 Foner, Eric, "Forever Free: The Story of Emancipation and Reconstruction" Alfred A. Knoff 2005

      14 Lundie, Catherine, "Doubly Dispossessed: Kate Chopin’s Women of Color" 2 : 126-144, 1994

      15 Bauer, Margaret D., "Critical Essays on Kate Chopin" G. K. Hall 161-180, 1996

      16 Walcott, Ronald, "Chesnutt’s ‘The Sheriff’s Children’ as Parable" 7 (7): 83-85, 1973

      17 Chesnutt, Hellen M., "Charles Waddell Chesnutt: Pioneer of the Color Line" U of North Carolina P 1952

      18 Trodd, Zoe, "Charles Chesnutt Reappraised: Essays on the First Major African American Fiction Writer" McFarland 120-130, 2009

      19 McWilliams, Dean, "Chares W. Chesnutt and the Fictions of Race" University of Georgia P 2002

      20 Koloski, Bernard, "Awakenings: The Story of the Kate Chopin Revival" Louisiana State UP 2009

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      기준연도 WOS-KCI 통합IF(2년) KCIF(2년) KCIF(3년)
      2016 0.29 0.29 0.23
      KCIF(4년) KCIF(5년) 중심성지수(3년) 즉시성지수
      0.22 0.23 0.599 0.08
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