Art makers have taken significant responsibilities and undoubtedly, all the African-American playwrights, like other artists, have struggled to convey their various purposes to their community for social mobility such as raising coloured people’s awareness, educating them about their circumstances, and making them take an active role in their liberation process rather than being passive. Thanks to this regeneration, the misconception about Afro-American history may be corrected from the beginning with the acceptance of the duality in their identities without ceasing one of them; Africanness and Americanness. The battle in this twoness in one black body has reshaped coloured people’s perceptions towards their past, current situations and the future. Due to the ongoing suppression of the “white world,” Afro-American people have not only been excluded from being Americans in their state of mind but also have been marginalized in the U.S. ghettos with the fear of exchanging their genetic heritage through interracial marriage. Therefore, this thesis examines black experiences related to ghettoization and its consequences depending upon especially miscegenation within the frame of William Edward Burghardt Du Bois’s theory of double consciousness and Frantz Fanon’s inferiority complex term in the way of re-shaping coloured people identities in the selected plays which provide a wider perspective from different periods: Lorraine Hansberry’s A Raisin in the Sun (1959) and Lynn Nottage’s play; Fabulation, or the Re-education of Undine (2004).
Title (dc.title) | Reflections of the black ghettoization process in the selected African - American plays in ethnically specific perspectives |
Author [Asıl] (dc.creator.author) | İpek, Esra |
Yazar Departmanı (dc.creator.department) | Yeditepe University Graduate School of Social Sciences |
Yazar Departmanı (dc.creator.department) | Yeditepe University Graduate School of Social Sciences Master’s Program in English Language and Literature |
Publication Date (dc.date.issued) | 2024 |
Publication Type [Academic] (dc.type) | preprint |
Publication Type [Media] (dc.format) | application/pdf |
Subject Headings [General] (dc.subject) | Double consciousness |
Subject Headings [General] (dc.subject) | Ghettoization |
Subject Headings [General] (dc.subject) | İnferiority complex |
Subject Headings [General] (dc.subject) | Miscegenation |
Subject Headings [General] (dc.subject) | Çifte bilinç |
Subject Headings [General] (dc.subject) | Gettolaşma |
Subject Headings [General] (dc.subject) | Aşağılık kompleksi |
Subject Headings [General] (dc.subject) | Melezleşme |
Publisher (dc.publisher) | Yeditepe University Academic and Open Access Information System |
Language (dc.language.iso) | eng |
Abstract (dc.description.abstract) | Art makers have taken significant responsibilities and undoubtedly, all the African-American playwrights, like other artists, have struggled to convey their various purposes to their community for social mobility such as raising coloured people’s awareness, educating them about their circumstances, and making them take an active role in their liberation process rather than being passive. Thanks to this regeneration, the misconception about Afro-American history may be corrected from the beginning with the acceptance of the duality in their identities without ceasing one of them; Africanness and Americanness. The battle in this twoness in one black body has reshaped coloured people’s perceptions towards their past, current situations and the future. Due to the ongoing suppression of the “white world,” Afro-American people have not only been excluded from being Americans in their state of mind but also have been marginalized in the U.S. ghettos with the fear of exchanging their genetic heritage through interracial marriage. Therefore, this thesis examines black experiences related to ghettoization and its consequences depending upon especially miscegenation within the frame of William Edward Burghardt Du Bois’s theory of double consciousness and Frantz Fanon’s inferiority complex term in the way of re-shaping coloured people identities in the selected plays which provide a wider perspective from different periods: Lorraine Hansberry’s A Raisin in the Sun (1959) and Lynn Nottage’s play; Fabulation, or the Re-education of Undine (2004). |
Record Add Date (dc.date.accessioned) | 2024-09-09 |
Açık Erişim Tarihi (dc.date.available) | 2024-09-09 |
Haklar (dc.rights) | Yeditepe University Academic and Open Access Information System |
Erişim Hakkı (dc.rights.access) | Open Access |
Copyright (dc.rights.holder) | Unless otherwise stated, copyrights belong to Yeditepe University. Usage permissions are specified in the Open Access System, and "InC-NC/1.0" and "by-nc-nd/4.0" are as stated. |
Copyright Url (dc.rights.uri) | http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0 |
Copyright Url (dc.rights.uri) | https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-NC/1.0/?language=en |
Description (dc.description) | Final published version |
Description [Note] (dc.description.note) | Note: This preprint reports new research that has not been certified by peer review and should not be used as established information without consulting multiple experts in the field. |
Description Collection Information (dc.description.collectioninformation) | This item is part of the preprint collection made available through Yeditepe University library. For your questions, our contact address is openaccess@yeditepe.edu.tr |