The Nadir and the Zenith: Temperance and Excess in the Early African American Novel
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The Nadir and the Zenith is a study of temperance and melodramatic excess in African American fiction before the Harlem Renaissance. Anna Pochmara combines formal analysis with attention to the historical context, which, in addition to postbellum race relations in the United States, includes white and black temperance movements and their discourses. Despite its proliferation and popularity at the time, African American fiction between Reconstruction and World War I has not attracted nearly as much scholarly attention as the Harlem Renaissance. Pochmara provocatively suggests that the historical moment when black people’s “status in American society” reached its lowest point— what historian Rayford Logan called the “Nadir”—coincides with the zenith of black novelistic productivity before World War II.
Pochmara examines authors such as William Wells Brown, Charles W. Chesnutt, Paul Laurence Dunbar, Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, Pauline Elizabeth Hopkins, and Amelia E. Johnson. Together, these six writers published no fewer than seventeen novels in the years of the Nadir (1877–1901), surpassing the creativity of all New Negro prose writers and the number of novels they published during the height of the Harlem Renaissance in the 1920s.
Anna Pochmara
Anna Pochmara is Assistant Professor at the Institute of English Studies at the University of Warsaw. She is the author of The Making of the New Negro: Black Authorship, Masculinity, and Sexuality.
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The Nadir and the Zenith - Anna Pochmara
THE NADIR & THE ZENITH
THE NADIR & THE ZENITH
TEMPERANCE & EXCESS IN THE EARLY AFRICAN AMERICAN NOVEL ANNA POCHMARA
THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA PRESS
ATHENS
© 2021 by the University of Georgia Press
Athens, Georgia 30602
www.ugapress.org
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Pochmara, Anna, author.
Title: The nadir & the zenith : temperance & excess in the early African American novel / Anna Pochmara.
Other titles: The nadir and the zenith
Description: Athens : The University of Georgia Press, [2021] | Includes bibliographical references and index.
Identifiers: LCCN 2020041574 (print) | LCCN 2020041575 (ebook) | ISBN 9780820358918 (hardback) | ISBN 9780820359021 (paperback) | ISBN 9780820358925 (ebook)
Subjects: lcsh: American fiction—African American authors—History and criticism. | American fiction—19th century—History and criticism. | Temperance in literature. | Characters and characteristics in literature. | African Americans—Intellectual life—19th century.
Classification: LCC PS153.N5 P634 2020 (print) | LCC PS153.N5 (ebook) | DDC 813/.309896073—dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2020041574
LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2020041575
CONTENTS
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Introduction The Zenith and the Nadir
THE EARLY AFRICAN AMERICAN NOVEL
Part 1. The Excess of Mulatta Melodrama
Chapter 1 Mulatta Melodrama
MIXED RACE AND THE MELODRAMATIC MODE IN THE EARLY BLACK NOVEL
Chapter 2 The Apple Falls Far from the Tree
MATRILINEAL OPPOSITION IN MULATTA MELODRAMA
Chapter 3 The Fall of Man
WHITE MASCULINITY ON TRIAL
Part 2. Black Tropes of Temperance
Chapter 4 The Genre Mergers of the Nadir
ANTIDRINK LITERATURE, SENTIMENTALISM, AND NATURALISM IN BLACK TEMPERANCE NARRATIVES
Chapter 5 Aesthetic Excess, Ethical Discipline, and Racial Indeterminacy
FRANCES ELLEN WATKINS HARPER’S SOWING AND REAPING
Chapter 6 Tropes of Temperance, Specters of Naturalism
AMELIA E. JOHNSON’S CLARENCE AND CORINNE
Chapter 7 Enslavement to Philanthropy, Freedom from Heredity
PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR’S THE UNCALLED
Chapter 8 Metropolitan Possibilities and Compulsions
THE MULATTA AND THE DANDY IN PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR’S THE SPORT OF THE GODS
Conclusion The Nadir and Beyond
ECHOES OF MULATTA MELODRAMA AND THE BLACK TEMPERANCE NOVEL IN THE EARLY TWENTIETH CENTURY
NOTES
WORKS CITED
INDEX
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
As with any academic project, this book could not have been written without assistance and encouragement from many people and institutions. I thank my friends and colleagues from the Institute of English Studies at my home university and from the Polish Association for American Studies for their continuing intellectual and emotional support. I am grateful in particular to Agnieszka Graff, Filip Lipiński, Zuzanna Ładyga, Ewa Łuczak, Łukasz Muniowski, Marek Paryż, Justyna Wierzchowska, Justyna Włodarczyk, and Joanna Ziarkowska. I also owe thanks to my friends and colleagues from the CAAR (Collegium for African American Research). I would especially like to thank M. Giulia Fabi, Tess Chakkalal, and Hanna Wallinger, who have encouraged and supported my interest in and research of the Nadir era and have generously shared their own expertise in the field. I’m truly grateful to P. Gabrielle Foreman and Hazel V. Carby, whose work has been an inspiration for my own writing, for their words of support and encouragement. I am indebted to Gene Jarrett for his help with archival sources on Paul Laurence Dunbar. I also consulted the Livesey Collection at the University of Central Lancashire, and I owe gratitude to Annemarie McAllister, the head of the Demon Drink: Picturing Temperance project, and to Bob Frost from the Special Collections & University Archives. For the help with my research of casta paintings, I thank Irma Méndez from the Museo de Historia Mexicana, Monterrey. A large part of this book was written during a residency at the Konvent art center in Cal Rosal, Spain, and I am deeply thankful to the local organizers for their warm welcome and to Alejandro Dorda, who initiated the 2018 residency project, as well as to the remaining fifty participants of the program, whose creative energy, intellectual stimulation, and kindness helped me finish. The book would take longer to write without help from my parents and my parents-in-law, to whom I am grateful for their understanding and financial support in cases of emergency and, primarily, for the time they lovingly devoted to taking care of my daughter when I was occupied with work. Finally, for his unswerving support and understanding, I thank my husband, Paweł Ryżko.
Earlier versions of parts of this study appeared as follows:
Enslavement to Philanthropy, Freedom from Heredity: Amelia E. Johnson’s and Paul Laurence Dunbar’s Uses and Misuses of Sentimentalism and Naturalism,
Polish Journal for American Studies, vol. 12, 2018, pp. 113–128.
"Tropes of Temperance, Specters of Naturalism: Amelia E. Johnson’s Clarence and Corinne," Atlantis: Journal of the Spanish Association for Anglo-American Studies, vol. 38, no. 2, 2018, pp. 45–62.
Like Mother Like Daughter? Matrilineal Opposition in African American Mulatta Melodrama,
Anglica: An International Journal of English Studies, vol. 26, no. 1, 2017, pp. 165–192.
Failed Patriarchs, Familial Villains, and Slaves to Rum: White Masculinity on Trial in African American Mulatta Melodrama,
NJES: Nordic Journal of English Studies, vol. 15, no. 4, 2016, pp. 208–235.
THE NADIR & THE ZENITH
INTRODUCTION
The Zenith & the Nadir
THE EARLY AFRICAN AMERICAN NOVEL
The last decade of the nineteenth century and the opening of the twentieth century marked the nadir of the Negro’s status in American society.
—RAYFORD LOGAN, The Negro in American Life and Thought
The Nadir and the Zenith argues, both provocatively and seriously, that the historical moment when black people’s status in American society reached its lowest point—famously labeled as the Nadir by Rayford Logan (xxi)—coincides with the zenith of black novelistic productivity in the pre–Civil Rights era.¹ The novels this book analyzes were released between 1876 and 1902, a time period that almost mirrors the one examined in Logan’s study (1877–1901). In those years, at least thirteen African American authors published altogether not fewer than twenty-six novels.² The bulk of this corpus is magnified by the length of the narratives, written at a time when authors releasing installments were paid by the line. Additionally, because the data from the period is still fragmentary, the bibliography of early African American novels continues to be extended by newly rediscovered and reprinted works.³ In contrast, during the 1920s—the pivotal decade of the New Negro Renaissance—only twelve African American novels were published.⁴ Hence from the perspective of novelistic output, it turns out that the years of the historical Nadir during the Jim Crow era quantitatively overshadowed the oeuvres of the New Negro movement—traditionally represented as the high point of black literary history. The gradual improvement in the political situation of the black community after 1901 did not translate into an increase in novelistic production. Thus, paradoxically, the black novel’s zenith coincides with the historical nadir of black people in the United States.
Being conscious of the imperfections of the quantitative method of comparing and evaluating bodies of literature, I do not intend to make claims about the aesthetic value of the writing produced in the periods referred to above. What I want to suggest, however, is that the fin-de-siècle black novel continues to be virtually absent from, or at least dramatically underrepresented in, critical accounts of African American literature, despite the volume of this corpus. As far as literary value is concerned, I will expose the aesthetic complexity and intricacy of black-on-black and black-on-white signifying practices employed by the postbellum/pre-Harlem
authors, which have been either too frequently dismissed by scholars as an aesthetic failure
(Bone 25; Tate 8; Bell 75) or have remained invisible due to their subtlety and their embeddedness in contemporaneous cultural practices.⁵ Another central element of the novels analyzed in this work—one that critics perceived as problematic for many decades—is their rejection of racial realism. The expectation that black novelists represent African American life from the perspective of authentic (i.e., lower-class or folk and visibly black) characters has continued to be a key criterion in reading and evaluating African American literature at least since the turn of the twentieth century ( Jarrett, Deans and Truants 1, 11–20).⁶ This approach marginalized texts that either formally depart from literary realism or represent inauthentic
(i.e., not unequivocally black) characters. In the case of nineteenth-century African American studies, this led to an almost exclusive focus on the slave narrative tradition and a corresponding neglect of a large body of fiction produced by black men and women before the so-called Harlem Renaissance (hereafter labeled the New Negro Renaissance). Instead of visibly black characters representing either the folk or the lower class, the selected novels by William Wells Brown, Charles W. Chesnutt, Paul Laurence Dunbar, Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, Pauline Elizabeth Hopkins, and Amelia E. Johnson center on racially indefinite protagonists or white-looking mulattas. Such dependence on racial ambiguity or indeterminacy directly led to their marginalization in the field of African American studies in the twentieth century.
The paradigm of racial authenticity is closely connected to black—as well as white—masculinist paradigms of militant heroism and brutal realism. Inasmuch as these critical lenses minimize the appeal of the melodramatic mode, the culture of sentiment, and other affect-based aesthetics, their long dominance further contributed to the marginalization of the works analyzed in this book. Due to these works’ employment of stylistic excess and heightened emotionality, they were not treated as serious literature. Even though black feminist interventions have demonstrated the significance of black women’s fin-de-siècle literature, culture, and activism at least since the late 1980s, women-authored novels from this corpus continue to be particularly absent from the canon or university curricula and are only marginally present in the critical discourse.⁷
In response to these critical exclusions and omissions, The Nadir and the Zenith sets out to analyze early black novels that subvert the traditional expectations set for African American texts. As Gene Jarrett argues, reading a cultural tradition through the lens of its anomalies has the potential to redefine it in a more radical way than a rereading of canonical works, as it brings about a readjustment of those monolithic, uncontestable paradigms of cultural coherence and cohesiveness
imposed on literary productions (Deans and Truants 11, 15, 17). The anomalous corpus of early black novels implodes the monolithic myth of racial authenticity, masculinist resistance, and literary realism. Instead of phenotypically black characters representing the masses, the examined works focus either on racially indefinite protagonists, white-looking mulattas, or on real Albinos,
to use the slave auctioneer’s taxonomy from Clotel (Brown 49). Instead of the dominant discourse of black authenticity, their aesthetics are distinguished by melodramatic excess and narrative implausibility. Instead of masculinist heroism and the publicly visible victories associated with it, the narratives represent the heroism of reform and local community activism, which is frequently invisible, exercised on the volatile boundaries of the private and the public, and mostly performed by women rather than men. Hence, over thirty years after Hazel Carby’s Reconstructing Womanhood, which was considered a cultural history and critique of the forms in which black women intellectuals made political as well as literary interventions in the social formations in which they lived
(7), the urgency of foregrounding and interrogating the complex intersections of gender and sexuality politics alongside race and class ideologies in this neglected corpus is all the more timely. In order to provide for the most comprehensive reading of these novels, I balance a mindful attention to their sociopolitical and cultural contexts with a close reading of the individual works. I also scrutinize the intertextual links between the primary sources and their signifying turn on hegemonic traditions, which notably include woman’s fiction, the culture of sentiment, temperance discourse, and turn-of-the-twentieth-century naturalism.
Although the novels I discuss in The Nadir and the Zenith have often been either ignored or reductively misread by twentieth-century scholars, they exemplify several significant tendencies of black fiction in the period in general. Most notably, their aesthetic excess, unruly poetics, and undisciplined plots are contrasted with the ethics of temperance and self-discipline. In the disciplinary gospel of the novels, the new generation of protagonists serve as role models, which gives the narratives an orientation toward the future. Whereas Robert Bone argues that during this period the black novel was deeply classist, reactionary, and expressed the sentiment that the bad Negro keeps the good Negro back
(18), such a conclusion misses the subtle ways in which the novels juxtapose the weak and servile Old Negroes
of the slavery era with the independent, self-determined New Negroes, typically represented by black women exerting control over their private and communal bodies.
This futuristic direction is reinforced by the cult of temperance’s consistency with the modern regime of self-discipline, and the divergence of such self-discipline from the ancient regime of masters and slaves, protectors and dependents (Foucault, Discipline 224–228). The novels’ insistent praise of self-control and self-determination expresses a desire for self-governance, while their dysphoric subplots expose the dangers of dependency, feudalism, and slavery. As such, the African American corpus stands apart from the pastoral nostalgia for the good old times
that characterized many strands of American literature after the Civil War. The late nineteenth-century canon perfectly exemplifies one of the central dialectics of US culture: the contrast between the machine and the pastoral ideal
(Marx 353), which is frequently reconciled with the idea of a redemptive journey away from society in the direction of nature
(Marx 69). In the Gilded Age of urbanization, industrialization, class strife, and new immigration, such genres as local-color fiction and westerns expressed and fulfilled a longing for an imaginary homogeneity of the rural past or the West before the end of the frontier.⁸ Analogously, the plantation tradition and the dialect movement fed nostalgia for a time when racial relationships had been simple and happy, at least for whites
(North 22–23). However, the disturbing injection of race politics is not limited to the plantation literature represented by Joel Chandler Harris and Thomas Nelson Page. As Jeffrey Louis Decker persuasively argues, US pastoralism, as well as its critical assessments, were inherently dependent on racial othering, whereby nonwhite Calibans
are apolitically positioned as the symbol of the ‘dark, hostile forces’ of nature
(Decker 289, 290). In contrast, the early African American novel, with its antipastoral and antinostalgic tone, avoids such incarceration in the prison house of ‘nature’
and the perpetuation of a violent and historical civilizing mission
(Decker 287). As a result, whereas Bone was right to claim that the early black novelists were not influenced by the regionalism of Harte, Twain, and Jewett
(21), The Nadir and the Zenith treats this lacuna as a politically significant evasion, a distancing from the traditions that firmly establish in the minds of white readership a picture of the freed slaves as hapless, childlike, and eager for paternalistic protection
(North 22).
Apart from the problematic race politics of pastoral nostalgia, black fiction’s challenge to create a redemptive character involved in a journey away from society
is also meaningful from a gender studies perspective. According to Nina Baym, whereas in nineteenth-century fiction, life in the country was traditionally pictured as the repository of virtue and decency,
women authors recognized country vices: brutalizing labor, mean minds, vicious gossip
and a constant dread of drought and foreclosure
(45). Baym’s observations are also valid for the fin-de-siècle black writers, for whom the unremitting toil in the fields triggered the specters of bondage and forced labor. For African American women in particular, rural isolation under the regime of slavery additionally signaled a threat from their abusive white, typically male, masters and later employers. As Harriet Jacobs, alias Linda Brent, claims, life on a distant plantation
was much more dangerous than in a town, where it was easier to make slaveholders’ villainy … public
(47; see also Fox-Genovese et al. 375). As a result, pastoral scenes in the corpus are either altogether absent or represented as short-lived and fatal in their consequences. Nor are there any idyllic rural feasts during which nature’s wealth is offered for consumption, producing a community of consumers and masking human labor under the guise of natural abundance, a central feature of the pastoral according to Raymond Williams (30–33). To the contrary, the novels’ temperance rhetoric is deeply suspicious of any eating and drinking communion,
charity of the feast,
and the frequently invisible, insatiable exploitation
they are dependent on (R. Williams 31). As the narrator of Katherine Davis Chapman Tillman’s Clancy Street laments, ‘Eat, drink, and be merry’ too often became the motto of the black community after Emancipation,
and she warns against perceiving life as one continuous holiday
(252).
This does not mean, however, that the early black novel romanticized urban life. Significantly, whereas the early modern pastoral celebrated country life and its absence of greed and calculation
in contrast to the city landscape of lawyers, politicians, and capitalists (R. Williams 28), African American writers approached the rural-urban dialectic in a more ambivalent way. They refrained from idealizing the country while relentlessly stigmatizing the greed, ambition, speculation, and calculation symbolic of the urban economy. Black novelists of the Nadir era position the unbridled passions of the marketplace as the antithesis of the ethics of temperance and advocate self-disciplinary practices as a moral and practical necessity. At the same time, however, modernity is presented as inevitable and definitely not worse than the past. In the last novel I examine in this book, The Sport of the Gods, Dunbar depicts the pitfalls of black urban migration without offering the rural South as a viable alternative to the metropolitan North. Overall, the future-oriented and antipastoral elements of the early African American novel form a complex nexus of subtle but definitively political meanings, which include a desire for self-governance, a rejection of pastoral plantation nostalgia, and a tentative embrace of modernity as unavoidable. In effect, decades before the New Negro Renaissance, the novels expressed hope for a better black future and called into being the modern era, in most cases embodied by the New Black Woman.
As has been mentioned, the discipline advocated by the novels is paradoxically complemented by sentimental, melodramatic, and, in the later years, also naturalist excess. While at first sight this might appear as a contradiction, a closer reading shows it to be a consistent and effective aesthetic whose key characteristic is an intense affective force that fosters a community of feeling. Lauren Berlant, one of the most vehement critics of the business of sentimentality,
claims that its defining feature is affective universality
and that what makes a thing sentimental is the presumption of emotional clarity and affective recognition
(Female 271–272). Even though Berlant is largely skeptical of a hegemonic culture of sentiment and its contradictory bargains with pain, domination, terror, and exile
(Poor
663), she admits that the possibility of identification which forms the core of sentimental compassion not only constitutes a threat but also remains the great promise of this affective aesthetic
(Poor
648). The affective edge of the heightened emotionality that characterizes the overlapping modes of sentimentalism and melodrama reduces the distance between the reader and the text, in effect producing what Berlant calls an intimate public,
a space of emotional contact
and mediation in which the personal is refracted through the general
(The Female viii).
These arguments also apply to the melodramatic mode. According to Peter Brooks, melos—the musical element that defines melodrama—intensifies the affective force of literary texts (14). Other critics also point to music’s capacity to collectivize feelings (Frith 36) and animate imagined communities
(Born 381). As Katrin Horn argues in her reading of excessive, highly affective styles, such works create communities of affective association. They have been historically significant, especially for minorities, and meet their need for a safe communal space (Horn 229). As will be demonstrated in the second part of this book, the excess of sentimentalism and melodrama is closely related to the naturalism that emerged precisely during the black Nadir (Howard 75). Although naturalism is frequently perceived as a documentary and objective aesthetic, in fact, its heightened photographic realism and focus on urban squalor, expressed in a yellow journalistic tone, are also excessive and sensational, whereas its reforming mission produces an analogous compassion in the other half to the female complaints
of sentimentalism. As The Nadir and the Zenith shows, naturalism’s affective force is as intense as that of sentimentalism and melodrama. Thus a striking combination of ethical temperance and aesthetic excess in the early black novel facilitates the emergence of a modern, self-governing black community that is not only public but also private, intimate, and cemented by affective attachments.
The first part of the book, The Excess of Mulatta Melodrama,
examines the most researched section of the early black novel corpus, which comprises mulatta narratives. Many critics have pointed out, even recently, a certain obsessive interest in those novels featuring mixed-race characters (Bost 11–16; Foreman, Who’s Your Mama?
505–539).⁹ Since the 1980s the figure of the mulatta has been reclaimed, primarily by black feminist critics, and presented as more subversive than tragic. More recently, analyses of the Nadir period’s fiction began to reflect changing critical perspectives in the field of cultural studies. The millennial fascination with biracialism and people of color has been mirrored by the rise of mixed-race studies, which largely adopt a poststructuralist perspective of a decentered, performative subjectivity. At the turn of the twenty-first century, several critics have also used the lens of new materialism to scrutinize the mulatta’s embodiment or engagement with affect theory and Berlant’s readings of sentimentalism.¹⁰ In the trope of the mulatta, these critical approaches have found an appealing object of analysis, and, in turn, they have productively reinvigorated the study of the racially anomalous texts of African American literature.
The Nadir and the Zenith builds on these findings and develops both the pioneering late twentieth-century readings and the more recent explorations of the period’s black fiction. Yet, in contrast to most black feminist studies, this book explicitly adopts the premise that even though mulatta melodrama and gender ideologies are central to black women’s fiction in this genre, they are also significantly present in the output of African American male writers.¹¹ Hence the corpus of the first part of this study will include works by Frances Ellen Watkins Harper and Pauline Elizabeth Hopkins as well as William Wells Brown and Charles W. Chesnutt, while in the second part I analyze works by Harper and Amelia E. Johnson as well as Paul Laurence Dunbar. The book also departs from many recent studies that conflate historical and literary figures in their corpora and, as a result, read the mulatta as an abstract, monolithic ideal, a fascinating epitome of hybridity. Many critics who aim to reconfigure the mulatta from the cliché of the tragic victim, neither black nor white,
nevertheless continue to treat the mixed-race figure as a homogeneous, transhistorical trope that functions in comparable ways in very different historical and geographical contexts, from the fin-de-siècle United States to the contemporary moment.¹² Atemporal or anachronistic readings tend to approach phenotypical mixed race as an illustration of postmodernist concepts such as ultimate aporia, free-floating signifiers, and cultural hybridity, or they use the literary trope to theorize about many later and nonliterary recastings of multiraciality (Bost 12; see also Doane 234). Even the most insightful of such analyses, frequently spanning more than a century—like Bost’s sweeping survey (1850–2000), for example—run the risk of missing the sociohistorical changes in the significance of like representations across time. Whereas many scholars have creatively used queer studies, theories of performance and performativity,
or mestiza theory
to read the mulatta as a figure engaged in parodic performatives
or a multiple, molten, fluid
identity (Zackodnik xxi–xxii; Bost 7–9), such is not the path I will take in this book.
Aware of the threats imbued in the millennial fascination with race mixing, the premature announcements of the postracial era, or simplified identification of fictions of passing as postmodernist narratives, The Excess of Mulatta Melodrama
—part 1 of this work—is determined to avoid such a frequently reductive atemporal approach. Not only does this book focus on a well-defined historical period—the black Nadir—but in my readings, I examine the difference between two dialectically opposite types of the mulatta. Moreover, my attention will be primarily devoted to the significance of the distinctive albino
mulatta rather than the visible embodiments of hybridity, brownness, or biraciality. The white mulatta, I argue, performs a politically and aesthetically significant function in the melodramas analyzed in this work. Additionally, her invisible racial identity parallels the racially indefinite characters in the black temperance narratives. The Nadir and the Zenith maintains an ongoing awareness of the context in which it is written, and it will use the analytical tools offered by critical race theory, neo-Marxism, and intersectional feminism, at the same time balancing this early twenty-first-century perspective by focusing attention on the historical context of the Nadir, in which both mulatta melodramas and temperance narratives were published. As a result, the corpus of the study will be limited to works of African American fin-de-siècle fiction, which are synchronically positioned against hegemonic literary discourses and diachronically against their predecessors such as Brown’s Clotel (1853) or Harriet Jacobs’s Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl (1861).
The primary sources examined in the first part of The Nadir and the Zenith represent the genre I refer to as mulatta melodrama. They consist of black [or rather mulatto] female texts,
defined in Claudia Tate’s typology as works whose dominant discourses and … interpretations arise from woman-centered values, agency, indeed authority that seek distinctly female principles of narrative pleasure
(Tate 67).¹³ The four novels—Clotel; or, The President’s Daughter; Iola Leroy; or, Shadows Uplifted; Hagar’s Daughter; and The House behind the Cedars—are authored by writers who identified as black even though their appearances ranged from the light-skinned Chesnutt to more visibly mixed-race Brown, Harper, and Hopkins. As the writers’ critical commentaries demonstrate, they were well aware of the political significance of interracial characters and interracial relationships, which, especially during the Nadir, had a unique capacity to critique American race relations and to expose the absurdities of the color line.
The mulatta melodrama is characterized by a tripartite structure. At its center is a dialectical relationship between the antebellum mulatta mother and her daughter, the New Negro woman of the Woman’s Era, and this female opposition is complemented by the figure of the failed white father. All mulatta novels examined in chapter 2 are future-oriented and juxtapose the slavery era–mothers with their daughters, who embody the black community’s hope. Chapter 3 uses the lens of masculinity studies to examine the figure of the white patriarch as well as other white men, whose gender performance is scathingly criticized in the analyzed works. Even though the texts’ sympathy for the mother figures is much stronger than for the fathers, both parents are represented as less disciplined and weaker than their self-determined daughters. In that one of the charges that mulatta melodrama makes against white privileged men is their intemperance—manifested in different ways as indulgences for various appetites and passions, most frequently sexual and alcoholic—the third chapter will form a bridge between The Excesses of Mulatta Melodrama
and Black Tropes of Temperance
and will highlight the overlapping spaces between the two corpora examined in this book.
The analysis in the first part of The Nadir and the Zenith is largely synchronic, and the chapters study the same set of texts, which stems from the often-times uncannily close similarities among all the mulatta novels. Although the main focus of the study is the era of the Nadir, the first primary source is an antebellum classic, Brown’s Clotel; or, The President’s Daughter (1853). Apart from its canonical position as the founding text of African American fiction, I analyze its profound influence on later mulatta melodramas authored by other writers examined in this book. In addition, its relevance for a study of the postbellum era is also evidenced by the fact that Brown continued to rewrite his novel after the Civil War, and its last version, Clotelle; or, The Colored Heroine; A Tale of the Southern States was released in 1867. The following two novels, Harper’s Iola Leroy; or, Shadows Uplifted (1893) and Hopkins’s Hagar’s Daughter (serialized in 1901–1902), represent the black Woman’s Era. Both draw on Brown’s text, frequently making direct intertextual allusions to his work. Harper’s and Hopkins’s novels focus, more centrally than Clotel, on a mixed-race female protagonist, yet the multigenerational family and relationality continue to be significant for their plots. These two black women’s works are complemented by Chesnutt’s The House behind the Cedars (1900), a novel that in the past has been studied much less widely than his more explicitly militant The Marrow of Tradition (1901), whose position in the canon is more central and better established.¹⁴
Whereas the