Dark Princess
Critical reception: Citations were added and paragraphs were broken up in critical reception and major themes section
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=== Double Consciousness === |
=== Double Consciousness === |
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The philosophical concept of [[double consciousness]], derived from the idea of psychic duality, describes the internal conflict experienced by African Americans as they navigate external perception with self-perception. Scholar James Stewart describes it as a tension between opposing societal demands and expectations.{{Cite journal |last=Stewart|first=James B.|date=1983|title=Psychic Duality of Afro-Americans in the Novels of W. E. B. DuBois|url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/275021?origin=crossref|journal=Phylon|volume=44|issue=2|pages=93-107|doi=10.2307/275021|via=JSTOR|url-access=subscription}} In ''Dark Princess,'' W. E. B. Du Bois utilizes his protagonist, Matthew Towns, to explore and articulate this experience. Early in the novel, Matthew Towns believes that "prejudice was a miasma that character burned away",{{Cite book |last=Bois|first=W. E. B. Du|url=https://standardebooks.org/ebooks/w-e-b-du-bois/dark-princess|title=Dark Princess|date=2026-03-23|publisher=Standard Ebooks}} reflecting confidence in meritocracy and individual success. However, despite being educated and hardworking, an embodiment of what the "ideal American" should exhibit, he was denied admission to continuing medical school due to racial discrimination and systemic barriers. This experience prompts Matthew Towns’ shift in perspective: now aware of African Americans’ racial reality, he begins to question his own beliefs. This realization highlights the beginning of Matthew Towns’ double consciousness emerging, reconciling his previous belief that an individual’s merits can overcome racial inequality.{{Cn|date=April 2026}} |
The philosophical concept of [[double consciousness]], derived from the idea of psychic duality, describes the internal conflict experienced by African Americans as they navigate external perception with self-perception. Scholar James Stewart describes it as a tension between opposing societal demands and expectations.{{Cite journal |last=Stewart|first=James B.|date=1983|title=Psychic Duality of Afro-Americans in the Novels of W. E. B. DuBois|url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/275021?origin=crossref|journal=Phylon|volume=44|issue=2|pages=93-107|doi=10.2307/275021|via=JSTOR|url-access=subscription}} |
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In ''Dark Princess,'' W. E. B. Du Bois utilizes his protagonist, Matthew Towns, to explore and articulate this experience. Early in the novel, Matthew Towns believes that "prejudice was a miasma that character burned away",{{Cite book |last=Bois|first=W. E. B. Du|url=https://standardebooks.org/ebooks/w-e-b-du-bois/dark-princess|title=Dark Princess|date=2026-03-23|publisher=Standard Ebooks}} reflecting confidence in meritocracy and individual success. However, despite being educated and hardworking, an embodiment of what the "ideal American" should exhibit, he was denied admission to continuing medical school due to racial discrimination and systemic barriers. This experience prompts Matthew Towns’ shift in perspective: now aware of African Americans’ racial reality, he begins to question his own beliefs. This realization highlights the beginning of Matthew Towns’ double consciousness emerging, reconciling his previous belief that an individual’s merits can overcome racial inequality.{{Cn|date=April 2026}} |
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=== Racial Solidarity === |
=== Racial Solidarity === |
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Du Bois explores racial solidarity as both a global and psychological concept. Internationally, ''Dark Princess'' connects African American identity to the "darker world," solidifying African Americans within the global network of colonized peoples working to resist Western imperialism. After his self-exile from the United States, Matthew Towns meets Princess Kautilya of Bwodpur, India. Upon their introduction at a cafe in Berlin, Matthew and Kautilya converse about American racism and Matthew’s personal experience with discrimination, prompting his introduction to "a great committee of the darker peoples; of those who suffer under the arrogance and tyranny of the white world." This group consisted of individuals from India, China, Egypt, and Arabia, symbolizing a unification of non-white nations’ shared experiences of racial oppression and resistance. Simultaneously, James Stewart further explains Du Bois’s idea that racial solidarity is tied to individual identity and group pride through the psychological profile of the "race man," someone who remains connected to their culture and works for the uplift and progression of their people. Du Bois connects these ideals, revealing that racial solidarity functions as both a global alliance and the foundation for identity. |
Du Bois explores racial solidarity as both a global and psychological concept. Internationally, ''Dark Princess'' connects African American identity to the "darker world," solidifying African Americans within the global network of colonized peoples working to resist Western imperialism. |
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After his self-exile from the United States, Matthew Towns meets Princess Kautilya of Bwodpur, India. Upon their introduction at a cafe in Berlin, Matthew and Kautilya converse about American racism and Matthew’s personal experience with discrimination, prompting his introduction to "a great committee of the darker peoples; of those who suffer under the arrogance and tyranny of the white world." This group consisted of individuals from India, China, Egypt, and Arabia, symbolizing a unification of non-white nations’ shared experiences of racial oppression and resistance. |
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Simultaneously, James Stewart further explains Du Bois’s idea that racial solidarity is tied to individual identity and group pride through the psychological profile of the "race man," someone who remains connected to their culture and works for the uplift and progression of their people. Du Bois connects these ideals, revealing that racial solidarity functions as both a global alliance and the foundation for identity. |
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=== Romance as an ideological double meaning === |
=== Romance as an ideological double meaning === |
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== Critical reception == |
== Critical reception == |
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Upon the release of the novel in 1928, [[Aubrey Bowser]], a literary critic for the [[New York Amsterdam News]], a Black-owned newspaper, published a review of Dark Princess titled "A New Du Bois" on May 9, 1928. Bowser introduces the public to the change in Du Bois’ ideologies found in the publication of his novel and explores its impact on society. {{Cite web |last=Bowser |first=Audrey |title=Book Review: A New Du Bois |url=https://www.proquest.com/docview/226314856/pageview/99C4BA883B134C6DPQ/1?accountid=14472&sourcetype=Newspapers |website=ProQuest}} |
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By the late 1920s, many individuals, both black and white, had settled on Booker T. Washington's approach of how to address the "Negro problem." Washington advocated for vocational studies and gradual accommodation, but Du Bois challenged this by urging people of color to confront systematic racial inequality. |
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| ⚫ | Prior to the creation and publication of ''Dark Princess'', Du Bois’s works, like ''[[The Souls of Black Folk|The Souls of Black Folks]]'', centered on the advancement, condition, and identity of Black people, along with racial inequality, within the United States. Bowser describes his previous writings as "polemic," reinforcing society’s primary perception of him as only a sociologist and political writer. Because of this preconception, people did not expect Du Bois to produce a work of fiction successfully. |
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''Dark Princess'' stood out because it broke the barriers of literary work, becoming the "first Black novel to stand out." Du Bois had already broken racial barriers regarding Black intellect and writings, but this book revealed a different dimension. By merging elements of politics, romance, and realism, Du Bois solidified their stance in the literary realm. He disabused the idea that an individual cannot be both a great intellect and a great storyteller. |
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Readers even noted that the novel preserves the complexities found in its characters and events that unfold throughout the narrative while admiring the romance and fictional storytelling. This approach was unconventional for African American literature at the time but resulted in the broadening of people’s perception of Black authorship and potential in literature. |
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This demonstrates Du Bois’s ambition to challenge traditional boundaries of genre and subject. Critics and readers both were intrigued by his mastery of intertwining, adding to one of W. E. B. Du Bois’s many literary achievements. Overall, Bowser's review claims ''Dark Princess'' successfully and rightfully distinguishes itself from Du Bois’s earlier writings, marking the beginning of a new era for W. E. B. Du Bois. |
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==See also== |
==See also== |
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