I'm almost indulging myself inside-out here, Mark.
I'm almost indulging myself inside-out here, Mark.
Dafydd Manton, A Legend In His Own Lunchtime!!www.dafydd-manton.co.uk
My Work Has Been Spread Over Many Fields!
I'm sorry, but you can't offer up pale pictures of people as 'proof' that they're coloured - absence of evidence is not evidence of absence!
Hair colour, eyes and build are not definite indicators - I've been described as dark and swarthy before, and I'm utterly Anglo-Saxon.
Austen was concerned about the plight of black people in the colonies - Mansfield Park has a wonderful scene when a discussion at a party moves around to the estate's revenues, which by implication are built on slavery in the West Indies (Man's-field, you see?), and suddenly the conversation goes absolutely dead, as no one is willing to voice the fact. That surely is a far more subtle way of passing comment on the social situation than Austen secretly and ambiguously making all her characters black! She's an infinitely better writer than that.
Oh, by the by, you also made a comment that Emma was dedicated to the Prince Regent (whom you assert was black) - this is very true, but the Prince was a big fan of hers, and requested that she dedicate a novel to him. She was absolutely against it, but her publishers were not prepared to disobey the Prince.
"I should only believe in a God that would know how to dance. And when I saw my devil, I found him serious, thorough, profound, solemn: he was the spirit of gravity- through him all things fall. Not by wrath, but by laughter, do we slay. Come, let us slay the spirit of gravity!" - Nietzsche
No, the thread is about you. Austen is just the tune you've given yourself to dance to.
You really mean this, don't you? Have you ever seen a black person?? They have other features. Without wanting to sound racist, they do not, and I repeat do not have the same features as caucasians, which we are talking about here. They even have another build bodywise.
So, Queen Alexandra's and a number of others' hair might look frizzled, but they still do not have black features. Ever heard of hair-curlers? Very popular, I daresay.
Did you know by the way, that the aristocrats you put on here, are all wearing wigs due to things such as lice and flees? Not to mention plain dirt and deseases such as scurvy and syphilis which took a toll on their hair. They had to cut their hair off. They even had special devices in order to be able to scratch under those wige which looked like little sticks with a little hook on it. Or did you think that those huge bunches of hair were real? You did didn't you, so how is it that nor black people (who mainly have very shrot hair because theirs does not get very long) nor caucasians have any hairdos like that at all anymore? Why do you think that is?
Because it is impossible. Their hair is much too thick to be real.
One has to laugh before being happy, because otherwise one risks to die before having laughed.
"Je crains [...] que l'âme ne se vide à ces passe-temps vains, et que le fin du fin ne soit la fin des fins." (Edmond Rostand, Cyrano de Bergerac, Acte III, Scène VII)
Perhaps we should get some structure in our exchanges lest we sound like Miss Bates.
Have you read my postings about 'identity' as a better indicator of a Black identity, then only looks. For example, we all understand a Jewish Identity, but we do not measure someones nose to determine his Jewish identity. We rather look at, if he is a writer, what world view he has, what Jewish ideas he puts forth etc.
Then I have given some examples of how a black person, Obama, can be made to look white. Yet we go by the descriptions and not some white looking, fake portrait.
Mansfield Park is about slavery, the Bertram family are slave owners. Mr. Nibbs was Jane Austen's godfather and had a plantation in Antigua, of which Jane's father, the reverend George Austen, was a trustee. Austen knew everything about slavery and condemned it, in Mansfield Park.
Fanny Price represents a favourite house slave. Her coming out ball is her manumission. Afterwards Austen suggest that marriage is a kind of slavery. She writes allegories that up to a point can be read as ordinary love stories.
Do you agree that Mr. Henry Crawford is Black? And his colour is not used to deprecate or diminish his character. Or to symbolise evil or some other nonsense. The Bertrams are coloureds, and they are in love with the Crawfords. Craving to bring back some colour, nobleness, into their bloodline.
Today I took Butler, J.A and the War of Ideas. Did you read the letters of Eliza de Feuillide, cousin of Jane Austen? I was mainly interested in the part about Marie Antoinette and wether she painted herself white, called rouging
Dear, I love you for your trivialities, but I'm really taking a stab at a scientific approach, here. I'm not talking general stuff, but specifics. Did you read about enamelling and how this nonsense of blue veins came into the world?
Blacks and coloureds come in many shapes and forms. Alicia Keys, is black, no? India Arie too. anyway, I'm reading my way through the 3000 books written about Jane Austen. How about you?
Since most of the posts are off-topic, this thread will now be closed.
Egmond> If you still would like to discuss this issue, please start another thread.
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