Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Fear the Subaltern.

Spivak uses the word "subaltern" to describe the Other in her postcolonial critique from this week's reading. "A subaltern, according to the dictionary, is a person holding a subordinate position," the book notes, also noting that it was originally used to describe a junior officer from the British army (2111). Let's remove that latter half, shall we? The "term's nuances" is what Spivak draws out- the unorganized mass caught between the "detested superiors" and "feared natives" (2111). "The "subaltern" always stands in an ambiguus relation to power- subordinate to it but never fully consenting to its rule, never adopting the dominant point of view or vocabulary as expressive of its own identity" (2111).
Ok, now I want you to picture the monster as an example -GET THIS!- of a subaltern. ( I know. you didn't think I'd go there. But I did, and so we continue. ) "Because subalterns exist, to some extent, outside power, theorists and advocates of political transformation have consistently looked to them as a potential source of change" (2111). It's hard to picture the future of the novel Frankenstein within the diegesis that Shelley sets up, and I'm completely sure that this was done on purpose. Does the monster kill himself? Does he move to the tropics anyway, by himself? Does he entertain himself by continuing his murderous hobby? Does he move to Russia and join the circus? Essentially, none of the answers to these questions matter- it is the fact that these questions come up at all that Shelley drives for. But I digress.
The reason I bring up the "subaltern" is to not only place the monster under its light, but to also draw out whether or not he is a "potential source of change." Obviously, he has "potential" to do something- he's affected more lives than just Victor's- but I feel that the only "change" he is the source is for more security. I don't think De Lacy or Feliz ever realize the monster's responsibility for the firewood, nor the extent to which the monster watched them. They never went into the room that the monster lived in! As soon as they met the monster, they abandoned their home in fear.
We haven't spoken too much in class about it, but fear is what motivates and influences people to the greatest extent. At least to me, it is fear that motivates more than... love, per say. Fear of another holy book's influence on its people in another country. Fear of terrorism for more airport security measures. Fear of someone else's sexuality because you don't understand the science behind it and feel that they'll rub off some of their gayness on you... but again, I digress.
In this light, the monster is influential. Now, it seems that he does not completely live up to his "subaltern" potential, or he does outside of the text of the novel. Nevertheless, the subaltern is one who "should be" feared, for it is the subaltern that exists outside of the power structure. It is out of control. This touches on the greatest fear of all time, what humans fear the most: not being in control.
Now, there are too many of us here on planet Earth for there to be no control- no country borders, no laws, no society, no classes, no races, no religions. And so the subaltern reigns.

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