The Colonel’s Dream and Charles Chesnutt’s Afrofuturist Vision of a Utopian South
The Colonel’s Dream and Charles Chesnutt’s Afrofuturist Vision of a Utopian South
Author(s): Marlene AllenSubject(s): Language and Literature Studies, Literary Texts, Essay|Book Review |Scientific Life, General Reference Works
Published by: Universitatea din Bucuresti - Sectia de Studii Americane
Keywords: Afrofuturism; Charles Chesnutt; utopia; African Americans; The Colonel’s Dream
Summary/Abstract: This essay reads Charles Chesnutt’s final published novel The Colonel’s Dream as an early work of Afrofuturism because of its speculation of the South as the site of a possible utopia for African Americans. The novel’s protagonist, Colonel Henry French, dreams of creating a capitalist utopia in his hometown of Clarendon, North Carolina, where both white Americans and African Americans who are eugenically fit can rise both socially and economically. However, in the end, the Colonel’s dream fails because he finds that the South has not progressed from the psychological hold that racism has on the mindset of white southerners.
Journal: [Inter]sections
- Issue Year: 2016
- Issue No: 19
- Page Range: 93-107
- Page Count: 15
- Language: English