Representations of Public Spaces and the Construction of Race in Yoko Tawada's "Bioskoop der Nacht"

However, despite the prominence of dermal and racial tropes throughout her oeuvre, there has been little discussion in secondary scholarship on this ideologically provocative aspect of Tawada's work. To illustrate Tawadas highly critical engagement with, and deconstruction of, racialized identi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inThe German Quarterly Vol. 90; no. 2; pp. 196 - 211
Main Author Redlich, Jeremy
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Cherry Hill American Association of Teachers of German 01.04.2017
Wiley
John Wiley & Sons, Inc
American Association of Teachers of German, Inc
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text
ISSN0016-8831
1756-1183
DOI10.1111/gequ.12032

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Summary:However, despite the prominence of dermal and racial tropes throughout her oeuvre, there has been little discussion in secondary scholarship on this ideologically provocative aspect of Tawada's work. To illustrate Tawadas highly critical engagement with, and deconstruction of, racialized identities, the following analysis focuses on the short story "Bioskoop der Nacht" through a theoretical lens informed by critical race theory, theories of racial performativity and critical whiteness studies. Specifically, I investigate how public spaces, like a public toilet and a segregated public bench, can be consequential in producing a subject's identification with a racial category, which over time sediments as a naturalized and normalized fact of nature that seemingly never required constituting in the first place.
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ISSN:0016-8831
1756-1183
DOI:10.1111/gequ.12032