Césaire, Aimé - Timothy Scheie (essay date spring 1998)

Timothy Scheie (essay date spring 1998)

SOURCE: Scheie, Timothy. “Addicted to Race: Performativity, Agency, and Césaire's A Tempest.College Literature 25, no. 2 (spring 1998): 17-29.

[In the following essay, Scheie elucidates the “potential for a subversive performativity in A Tempest, specifically in the final scene's enactment of racial identity as addiction.”]

A profound sense of spectacle pervades the dramatic writings of Aimé Césaire. Unabashedly political in their critique of simplistic, accepted readings of racial and national identity, these plays do not preach to the spectator, nor do they purport to mirror a reality through the conventions of mimetic theater. A lucid and frequently ironic deployment of theatricality lends them a complexity that resists a realist mise-en-scène, and that leads theater practitioners and spectators alike to ponder the implications of the foregrounded performance of...

[The entire page is 6497 words long]

Join eNotes

The above is a free excerpt. Get total access to this content with the: