The Sheriff's Children Chesnutt Analysis

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Oedipal Sam: A Psychoanalytic View of “The Sheriff’s Children” Charles Chesnutt’s “The Sheriff’s Children” deals with the subject of race and pedigree in the city of Troy, North Carolina. In Troy, time has almost come to a stand-still as its citizens lament and remember the end of the Civil War. Life becomes more interesting, however, when an old Confederate army captain is murdered. The first time this has happened in well over ten years, the citizens are in a state of shock until the murderer is revealed to potentially be an African-American man named Tom. Then they all go out to form a lynch mob. However, the story is not about the mob, it’s about the sheriff and his conversation with the prisoner, who turns out to be his son. Chesnutt’s story is an example of formalism, but by analyzing the text it is also an example of Sigmund Freud’s theory of dreams and unconscious desire. Freud’s theory of dreams is defined as that the unconscious mind governs more behavior to an undetected degree. According to the Norton, Freud “pursues the connection beyond the realm of general symbolism to lay out a kind of rhetoric of everyday dreams” (810). More famously, Freud is known for his concept of the Oedipus complex. In …show more content…

“The White fathers violate rights of birth and initiation by denying their paternity” (154). She goes on to say that the black children of white fathers are a taboo that are not talked about. In “The Sheriff’s Children,” Tom is tabooed by both black and white societies and for his potential criminality. Throughout the story, Tom maintains that he has not taken any life and that the only life he intends to snuff out is his father’s. Hathaway claims that “if the mulatto’s motivations for homicide were merely the destruction or avenging of white power structures, he would have murdered the captain or any other white man” (155). Instead, he only has eyes for his father’s

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