Realism's Reputations, Financialized Whiteness

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This essay uses the legal rearticulation of reputation as white heteropatriarchal property in an “Imperial Jim Crow” United States to piece apart the preoccupation with characters’ reputations in realist fiction. It focuses on two later-nineteenth-century arenas of what property theorist and legal scholar K-Sue Park has called the “generative dynamics” of racial capitalism: new markets in private commercial credit and the socio-legal (re)production of reputation. In so doing, the essay unearths realism’s invisiblized generic presupposition that the idea of reputations that help create modern literary characters are a neutral or self-evident category of experience.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)381-410
Number of pages30
JournalAmerican literature; a journal of literary history, criticism and bibliography
Volume96
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 1 2024

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Literature and Literary Theory

Keywords

  • character
  • financialization
  • realism
  • reputation
  • whiteness

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