Brown's Clotel
William Wells Brown defies notions of race and gender in his novel Clotel, or the President's Daughter by subverting the traditional norms associated with gender via the "cult of domesticity" that saturated the American public consciousness throughout the 19th century, locating true womanhood within the domestic work and life of the home. Brown's portrayal of womanhood, however, in Clotel contradicts the "cult" mentality by depicting not only a strong woman but a strong black woman -- which challenges the racial stereotypes and "ethnic notions" popularized by American media in the antebellum years as well. This paper will show how Brown achieves this contrasting view of race and gender in his novel by developing the character of Clotel in such a way that she resists all stereotypes and even takes on the persona of the tragic heroine when she jumps to her death at the end of the novel to avoid being placed back into slavery.
Brown's depiction of Clotel is one that defies the popular notions of race and gender in the 19th century in America. Blacks were viewed as buffoons or as human-simian hybrids, and as chattel. Brown showed through Clotel that there was more to blacks than what the white establishment was giving them credit for. Clotel was at once a self-sacrificing strong, female heroine and an independent woman who could rise above her obstacles to approach the destiny that she chose for herself. At one point, Brown even has Clotel dressing in man's clothes to escape to freedom -- a gender-defying, unconventional act that clearly establishes Clotel in a category alongside that of Shakespeare's heroines.
Clotel's daughter Mary moreover is a race-defying character -- the fruit of Clotel and Horatio -- a mixed-race slave, who resembles the flower depicted by Lydia Maria Child (1842) in "The Quadroons" -- "the Pride of China mixed its oriental-looking foliage with the majestic magnolia" (p. 115): Mary is the fruit of the mixture...
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