"Race and Ace in Victor Hugo" with Nemo Martin

23 ago 2022 · 11 min. 7 sec.
"Race and Ace in Victor Hugo" with Nemo Martin
Descrizione

One episode more! In this bonus track, Nemo Martin (Royal Holloway) tells me about their research on race, racism, and racist tropes in Hugo’s classic Les Misérables, but also in...

mostra di più
One episode more! In this bonus track, Nemo Martin (Royal Holloway) tells me about their research on race, racism, and racist tropes in Hugo’s classic Les Misérables, but also in the fanfiction based on Hugo. Nemo kindly shares some insights on how these depictions of race are entangled with nonnormative genders and asexuality. What Nemo doesn’t mention in the recording is that they’re also a brilliant writer and podcast creator. Queer Asian pirates is all I’m saying…

Find out more about Nemo on Twitter (@zeus_japonicus and @lesmispodcast) and on their website https://www.nemomartin.com/ and follow @queerlitpodcast on Instagram and Twitter for more books and more gay.

People, texts and concepts mentioned:

#UntoldTales
https://untoldlgbtqtales.wordpress.com/
Victor Hugo’s Les Misérables and The Hunchback of Notre-Dame
Fanfiction
andré carrington
Romani
Esmeralda
Owarinaki Tabiji (終わりなき旅路)

Footnote from Nemo: “The “Racism is something whites define as bad action by others” quote is from Stephanie M. Wildman and Adrienne D. Davis, Language and Silence: Making Systems of Privilege Visible, 35 Santa Clara L. Rev. 881 (1995), available at: https://digitalcommons.law.scu.edu/lawreview/vol35/iss3/4. The Rromani person who talked about their opinion of Javert as Rrom: https://stfugadje-blog.tumblr.com/post/41556640377/theres-a-grief-that-cant-be-spoken.”



Questions you should be able to respond to after listening:

1.Nemo mentions the quote “Racism is something other white people do.”. What do you think that entails?
2.How might fanfiction almost unwittingly engage in racist depictions?
3.Which example does Nemo give for a racist trope in Hugo’s writing?
4.Nemo also briefly speaks about asexuality. How does sexuality intersect with race and gender here?
5.Can you think of a character from literary history that we could read as asexual?
mostra meno
Informazioni
Autore Lena Mattheis
Sito -
Tag

Sembra che non tu non abbia alcun episodio attivo

Sfoglia il catalogo di Spreaker per scoprire nuovi contenuti

Corrente

Copertina del podcast

Sembra che non ci sia nessun episodio nella tua coda

Sfoglia il catalogo di Spreaker per scoprire nuovi contenuti

Successivo

Copertina dell'episodio Copertina dell'episodio

Che silenzio che c’è...

È tempo di scoprire nuovi episodi!

Scopri
La tua Libreria
Cerca