Racism and Its Resistance in Aphra Behn's Oroonoko
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Department of English
Abstract
Thisdissertation on Aphra Behn'sOroonokoshows discrimination in terms of
racism onthe one hand and on the other hand the resistance of the blacks in response
to racism. Trefry, Byam, Bannister and the narrator discriminate and dominate the
blacks on the basis of their colour, race and physicality. The whites consider
themselves superior; that is why they exploit and dominate the blacks. On the
contrary, the protagonist of the novel, a black character, Oroonoko, as well as his
beloved, Imoinda, resist against racism by planning to kill the white men and by
shooting an arrow to Byam respectively. The most glaring example of the ideology is
the whites' labeling of the blacks as dogs. An armed activity on the part of the blacks
registers their resistance of the whites' racist attitude towards them.
