Detailed Information on Publication Record
2011
Citizenship in Secret: Hidden Sites and the Contradictions of Black and White Nationalism
SMITH, Jeffrey AlanBasic information
Original name
Citizenship in Secret: Hidden Sites and the Contradictions of Black and White Nationalism
Authors
Edition
Conference on "Sites of Citizenship," King's College, University of London, 2011
Other information
Language
English
Type of outcome
Prezentace na konferencích
Field of Study
Literature, mass media, audio-visual activities
Country of publisher
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Confidentiality degree
není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
Organization unit
Faculty of Arts
Keywords in English
American literature, US race relations, Thomas Dixon, Suttton Griggs, citizenship, segregation, nationalism, Ku Klux Klan
Tags
Změněno: 1/2/2017 10:56, doc. Jeffrey Alan Smith, M.A., Ph.D.
Abstract
V originále
This paper examines the work of two novelists from the turn of the twentieth century, one black and one white, whose sharply contrasting, almost mirror-image fictions experimented with redefining citizenship along racial lines. Both Sutton Griggs and Thomas Dixon saw the U.S. as suffering from a constitutional vacuum, an absence of legitimate authority that had left one racial group at the mercy of another. Both imagined the victimised group drawing its ‘citizens’ together in a secretive underground designed to supply the missing constitutional forms: for Griggs, the Imperium in Imperio, a fictional shadow government of and for African-Americans, and for Dixon the Ku Klux Klan, cast as heroes in the tales that later became the landmark film The Birth of a Nation. Necessarily operating from hidden sites – secluded woods, caves, a whole concealed ‘capital’ – Griggs’ and Dixon’s clandestine quasi-governments finally self-destruct, and the similar failures of these two very different ‘nations within the nation’ point, in turn, to contradictions inherent in trying to make citizenship a function of race.