On the occasion of the twentieth anniversary of Charles V. Carnegie’s Postnationalism Prefigured (2002), this essay extends Carnegie’s insights about the inadequacy of using concepts of race as the foundation for nationalism to explore the social exclusions that are enforced in such constructions along lines of not only race but gender and sexuality as well. Taking a cue from a personal anecdote Carnegie relates in the book about the problem he poses as a “dundus” (Jamaican with albinism) for systems of racial classification, the author relies on reminiscence and a similar anecdote about his own misrecognition as “chineyman” (Chinese Jamaican) and possible “battyman” (gay man) to uncover the heterosexual and patriarchal norms that also underwrite the race/nation imaginary.
The Dundus and the Chineyman: Reflections on Postnationalism Prefigured
Timothy S. Chin is currently the interim associate dean in the College of Arts and Humanities at California State University, Dominguez Hills. His academic training and research interests are in Caribbean literature and culture, African American literature and culture, theories of diaspora and transnationalism, and theories of race, gender, and sexuality. He has written on Chinese Jamaican literary and cultural production, Caribbean immigrants in African American literature, and homophobia in Black popular culture and Caribbean literature. He was born in Jamaica and raised in Kingston and Queens, New York.
Timothy S. Chin; The Dundus and the Chineyman: Reflections on Postnationalism Prefigured. Small Axe 1 March 2024; 28 (1 (73)): 69–75. doi: https://doi.org/10.1215/07990537-11131213
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