|  | IV   If Williams's "Desire and the Black Masseur" is about anything 
        it is about the process of othering, a process from which Williams himself 
        cannot entirely escape in writing the story. What Williams demonstrates 
        best here is that each Other is inextricably bound to each other, 
        including the Self, be it the protagonist of the story or the creator 
        of that protagonist. Therefore, we cannot accept a given Self/Other binary 
        because the complexities of human desire deny a one-to-one correlation 
        between sexuality, race, and creed. Williams would continue to explore 
        [p. 138] this theme for the next decade 
        and a half, including many of his signature works like A Streetcar 
        Named Desire, The Rose Tattoo, Baby Doll, and Sweet 
        Bird of Youth, culminating finally in the violent Christian allegory 
        Suddenly Last Summer, where his use of homoerotic tropes and Christian 
        consubstantiation would once again be countered by the presence of a hoarding 
        black mass with cannibalistic intentions.
  While much good scholarship has already appeared concerning the play's 
        treatment of religion and sexual economics, surprisingly little commentary 
        has discussed the racial implications of Sebastian's offering up his gay 
        body as Holy Communion to the hungry children of Cabeza de Lobo.(30) And 
        yet, as with the story "Desire and Black Masseur," we find obvious 
        images of blinding whiteness in contrast to the blackness of the skin 
        that, when combined with homoerotic, religious and cannibalistic tropes, 
        reconfirm a consuming Africanist presence in the play different from the 
        one Williams openly solicits. In fact, devouring could be understood as 
        the play's main theme, be it the literal consumption of the organism reflected 
        in the symbolic Venus flytrap or the carnivorous birds on the Encantadas; 
        the materialist consumption of Sebastian's fortune by his opportunist 
        aunt and cousin George; or his poetic legacy by his megalomaniacal mother/surrogate 
        wife Violet Venable. Even the psychiatrist Dr. Cukrowicz, in pandering 
        to Violet to secure her money for an endowment to continue his research 
        into lobotomies, cannot avoid contributing to the play's quid pro quo 
        leitmotif.(31) All are, in fact, vivid [p. 139] 
        tropes of consumption that Williams uses antithetically to the taking 
        of the Eucharist and that are actualized in the play's climactic, cannibalistic 
        scene.
  By itself, the trope of consumption is purely thematic and dramatic. Set 
        during the heart of the Depression in 1935, when lobotomies (like the 
        one performed on Williams's sister Rose) were beginning to be used when 
        shock therapy proved ineffectual, Suddenly Last Summer is ostensibly 
        all about money    the contrast not between those who have and do not 
        but rather between those who had and those, like the Venables, who still 
        do. At a time of Social Realism, when Williams the playwright began cutting 
        his own teeth, the true cannibal was perhaps capitalism itself; thus, 
        the starving of the Venus flytrap, which dramatically opens the play, 
        is one of Williams's most poignant criticisms of the laissez-faire politics 
        responsible for the 1929 crash and its aftermath. But Violet also refuses 
        to keep the insectivorous plant alive because it reminds her too much 
        of the way in which her beloved Sebastian died, consumed by everyone, 
        including herself, for his beauty, grace, and illicit desire. Alone, then, 
        the multiple references to consuming merely replicate the play's main 
        theme of predatorily social politics. Once that theme becomes mixed with 
        the play's religious and homoerotic tropes, however, the idea of consuming 
        takes on greater racial significance.(32)
  Unlike the homoerotic beginning to "Desire and the Black Masseur," 
        Williams first establishes the play's religious context with Violet's 
        story about her and Sebastian's voyage to the Galapagos Islands, "looking," 
        as she says, "for God."(33) That cruel or indifferent God that 
        Sebastian finds is represented in the horrific story of the "flesh-eating 
        birds" (3:355) which ravage the baby sea turtles during their flight 
        to freedom on the volcanic black-sand beaches of the Encatadas.(34) The 
        parable, of course, is repeated in Catherine's story about how the poor 
        [p. 140] children from whom Sebastian 
        has solicited sexual favors kill and eat him out of ritualized retribution 
        for his failing to uphold his end of their economic exchange. When the 
        starving children do devour parts of Sebastian's body, having cried out 
        "Pan, pan, pan!" (3:415) moments before the attack, Sebastian 
        becomes the Holy Eucharist  the bread of life and the Bread of Life  whom 
        these "featherless little black sparrows" (3:422) literally 
        ingest, just as the others before had done so metaphorically.
  These multiple tropes of consumption which emerge from the play's religious 
        and homoerotic content, however, evoke a blatant dichotomizing of race 
        into its black and white components of which Williams is perhaps only 
        liminally aware. Just as he had done in "Desire and the Black Masseur," 
        Williams first establishes a black/white binary so as to deconstruct it. 
        To be sure, the "good" Sebastian is frequently describes as 
        being dressed all in white, donned in his "spotless white silk Shantung 
        suit and a white silk tie and a white panama and white shoes, white  white 
        lizard skin  pumps! (3:414). But the nasty Sister Felicity who "chaperones" 
        Catherine is also dressed in her starched "sweeping white habit" 
        (3:370), to which Williams draws our attention more than once.(35) And 
        yet, if the white presence in Williams is never wholly "good," 
        the black presence is never anything but antagonistic.
  For instance, in relating the story to Dr. Cukrowicz, Violet describes 
        how the carnivorous birds, soaring over "the narrow black beach of 
        the Encantadas," which earlier she had said was the "color of 
        caviar" (3:355), had "made the sky almost as black as the beach!" 
        (3:356). As innocent as Violet's description first appears, once those 
        hoards of black birds are translated into the hoards of those dark naked 
        children with "little black mouths" (3:415) many summers later, 
        [p. 141] and the sea turtles' flesh 
        into that of Sebastian, Williams's Holy Eucharist becomes less a tale 
        about misappropriated consubstantiation or misrepresented homoeroticism 
        and more one about the voracious appetites. To be sure, Sebastian too 
        equates desire with eating, evidenced by his rendering his rough trade 
        in culinary terms:
  
        Fed up with dark ones, famished for light ones: that's 
          how he talked about people, as if they were  items on a menu.  "This 
          one's delicious-looking, that one is appetizing," or "that 
          one is not appetizing" [. . .]. (3:375) His language, though, is purely metaphorical here (to 
        be more accurate, they are not even his words but those that Catherine 
        says that he said), just as words and actions are of all of the other 
        characters Williams portrays as "white" in the play. Only the 
        "black" elements  first the carnivorous birds and then the 
        children  turn idiom into action.   That action takes place during the scorching, "blazing white hot 
        heat" of a Spanish summer, one that "blazed so bright it was 
        white and turned the sky and everything under the sky white with it!" 
        (3:420). In fact, Williams repeatedly references whiteness in this climatic 
        passage of the play so as to accentuate the red of Sebastian's blood, 
        but blackness is the instrument that draws out that redness. For instance, 
        though he sees himself in Christ-like terms and was searching each summer 
        for a way to satiate his homosexual desire and atone for it at the same 
        time (like Anthony Burns), Sebastian's final sacrifice (a sort of "Completion!  a 
        sort of!  image!  he had of himself as a sort of!  sacrifice 
        to a!  terrible sort of a   [. . .] cruel [God]" 
        [3:397])  is achieved by offering his white flesh up for communion 
        to "the band of naked children" (3:421) who made "gobbling 
        noises with their little black mouths, stuffing their little black fists 
        to their mouths and making those gobbling sounds, with frightful grins!" 
        (3:415):
  
        I heard Sebastian scream, he screamed just once before 
          this flock of black plucked little birds that pursued and overtook him 
          halfway up the white hill. [. . .] They had devoured parts of 
          him. [. . .] Torn or cut parts of him away with their hands or knives 
          or maybe those jagged tin cans they made music with, they had torn bits 
          of him away and stuffed them into those gobbling fierce little empty 
          black mouths of theirs. (3:422) In one final apocalyptic image, with homosexual quid 
        pro quo being expressed in terms of actualized fellatio and religious 
        performativity, Williams equally dichotomizes saintly white [p. 
        142] and satanic black, where the white body/politic is being 
        torn asunder and eaten by the savage and encroaching masses of little 
        hungry black mouths.   Though Williams's cannibalism here is meant to be symbolic  the culmination 
        of all of his previous uses of the consummation metaphor  it cannot 
        entirely avoid a racial reading either. As such, Sebastian's uncharacteristic 
        social critique of Spain just moments before his death only loosely camouflages 
        his racist ideologies: "Don't look at those little monsters. Beggars 
        are a social disease in this country. If you look at them, you get sick 
        of the country, it spoils the whole country for you . . . ." (3:415, 
        Williams's ellipses). If we recall Toni Morrison's comment earlier about 
        the need to "contextualize" the images of "impenetrable 
        whiteness" found in 19th-century American writers, however, what 
        we discover in Sebastian's comment is perhaps a larger 20th-century concern 
        with black mobilization in America. We should remember that, while Suddenly 
        Last Summer is set in 1935, it was penned in 1957, a seminal year 
        in the U.S. for the push for Civil Rights. Fallout from the 1956 Montgomery 
        Bus Boycott, for example, saw the 1957 signing of the Civil Rights Act 
        and the creation of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference under 
        King's presidency. It equally witnessed Arkansas Governor Orval Rubus's 
        attempt to derail desegregation by ordering the National Guard to block 
        the entrance of nine black students to the all-white Central High School 
        in Little Rock. Over the next few years, repeated dynamiting of Southern 
        black churches and black schools offered frightening testimony to the 
        realities America would face in enforcing Brown's overturning of 
        Plessy in 1954.(36)
  The year of Suddenly Last Summer's release as a popular film in 
        1959 also saw Lorraine Hansberry's A Raisin in the Sun become the 
        first Broadway play by a black woman. Ostensibly about the assimilationist/separatist 
        debate within the black community, not in terms of Civil Rights per se 
        (though Beneatha does provide plenty of examples of black activist rhetoric), 
        but rather in terms of class ascension, Hansberry's play would also allay 
        white fears of black mobilization. If Lena Younger's purchasing of a modest 
        house in the all-white, middle-class [p. 143] 
        suburb of Clybourne Park is met by Karl Lindner's sugar-coated, racially-motivated 
        attempts to keep the black man from spilling over its urban boarders and 
        into his suburban arcadia (or, as Beneatha puts it, to keep the spreading 
        black mass from "eat[ing] 'em"(37)), it is less to criticize 
        white America and more to show them that black America understands its 
        fears. At the moment the Younger's show Clybourne Park and its Improvement 
        Association that is shares their moral values such as hard work and family 
        unity, and thus poses no real threat to their suburban havens, Hansberry 
        seals her own racial contract with her predominantly white Broadway audiences. 
        To be sure, black emancipation was imminent, and neither a northern black 
        liberal playwright, nor a southern white one, could entirely escape from 
        its inscription in her/his imagery. Simply put, if Suddenly Last Summer's 
        surtext is about predatory economics and religious determinism, 
        then its subtext is about how those two issues are realized in racial 
        terms  for Morrison, that "dark and abiding presence that moves 
        the hearts and texts of American literature with fear and longing."(38)
 Conclusion  At the end of Playing in the Dark, Toni Morrison calls for an academic 
        agenda to reread the black characters of white literary America, not to 
        point racist fingers at knowingly or unwittingly xenophobic writers but 
        rather to expose how those black characters reveal the author's construction 
        of Self and the fears of the Other which help define it:
  
        Such studies will reveal the process of establishing 
          others in order to know them, to display knowledge of the other so as 
          to ease and to order external and internal chaos. Such studies will 
          reveal the process by which it is made possible to explore and penetrate 
          one's own body in the guise of sexuality, vulnerability, and anarchy 
          of the other  and to control projections of anarchy with the disciplinary 
          apparatus of punishment and largess.(39)  What such a reading about Tennessee Williams reveals 
        is that, despite having always praised African Americans and having frequently 
        said in interviews and elsewhere that he believed [p. 
        144] America would only achieve its national project through 
        the mixing of its black and white bloods, he never aggrandized racial 
        issues convincingly in his work nor created sympathetic black character.(40) 
        Though racial issues simmer behind the plots of his Cold War plays (Sweet 
        Bird of Youth, Kingdom of Earth, and Suddenly Last Summer), 
        they serve only to haunt his altruistic critique of white (heterosexual) 
        social power structures since the final image of white society slowly 
        being consumed by blacks through miscegenation effectively redirected 
        national attention away from the homosexual as Other and onto its more 
        visible one.   As Eric Savoy has convincingly argued, the most effective representations 
        of American Gothic need be allegorical in nature, for its interpretative 
        nature allows the reader to inscribe a national history within a text 
        which is not there, especially given "the thinness, the blackness 
        of the American historical past and much of the American landscape" 
        necessary to gothic representation: "allegory [. . .] provided a 
        tropic of shadow [. . .] in which the actual is imbued with the darkly 
        hypothetical, a discursive field of return and reiteration."(41) 
        With Williams's two allegories intending to demonstrate that the "communion" 
        of race is one based not on creed, color, or sexuality, but rather on 
        human desire, he too cannot but help reproduce the national fear of the 
        predatory black race in presenting that message of brotherhood, since 
        the "American historical past" and its landscape have relied 
        upon the myth of black savagery to define its national self. So when the 
        giant masseur devours a bar of chocolate while daydreaming about Burns, 
        social cannibalism becomes implicit, just as Ned's consuming his gingerbread 
        Jim Crow [p. 145] in Hawthorne's House 
        of Seven Gables suggests how Brahmin abolitionism was not without 
        its predatory desires: whether it is white society devouring the blacks 
        via the spectacle of Jim Crow in the minstrel show, or black society consuming 
        the white race through sociopolitical advancement or interracial marriage 
        and breeding, in one way or another we are all just eating one another 
        up.
 
 Endnotes 
        Sigmund Freud, "The Uncanny," 
            The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund 
          Freud, vol. 17, trans. James Strachey (London: Hogarth, 1957), 241; 
          Leslie Fiedler, Love and Death in the American Novel (1960, London: 
          Paladin, 1970), 135.         Eric Savoy, Introduction, American Gothic: 
          New Interventions in a National Narrative, ed. Robert K. Martin 
          and Eric Savoy (Iowa City: U of Iowa P, 1998), vii.         Toni Morrison, Playing in the Dark: Whiteness 
          and the Literary Imagination (Cambridge: Harvard UP, 1992), 45.         Studies which have begun deciphering the Africanist 
          presence in Williams have concentrated on other works. See, for instance, 
          Philip C. Kolin, "Civil Rights and the Black Presence in Baby 
          Doll," Literature Film Quarterly 24.1 (1996): 2-11; 
          George W. Crandell, "Misrepresentation and Miscegenation: Reading 
          the Racialized Discourse of Tennessee Williams's A Streetcar Named 
          Desire," Modern Drama 40 (Fall 1997): 337-4; and Rachel 
          van Duyvenbode, "Darkness Made Visible: Miscegenation, Masquerade 
          and the Signified Racial Other in Tennessee Williams' Baby Doll 
          and A Streetcar Named Desire," Journal of American Studies 35 (2001): 203-215. Those studies which have examined these two texts 
          together have focused generally on their homosexual content. See, for 
          example, Annette J. Saddik, "The (Un)Represented Fragmentation 
          of the Body in Tennessee Williams's "Desire and the Black Masseur" 
          and Suddenly Last Summer," Modern Drama 41.3 (Fall 
          1998): 347-54, but especially John M.Clum, "The Sacrificial Stud 
          and the Fugitive Female in Suddenly Last Summer, Orpheus Descending, 
          and Sweet Bird of Youth," The Cambridge Companion to 
          Tennessee Williams, ed. Matthew C. Roudané (Cambridge: Cambridge 
          UP, 1997), 128-46, where he explores how "Christian notions of 
          guilt and atonement" make Anthony Burns and Sebastian Venable "blasphemous 
          Eucharist[s]" (131, 133).         Numerous critics, including myself, have thoroughly 
          tackled this subject. Among them, see especially David Savran, Cowboys, 
          Communists, and Queers: The Politics of Masculinity in the Works of 
          Arthur Miller and Tennessee Williams (Minneapolis: U of Minnesota 
          P, 1992); Robert J. Corber, Homosexuality in Cold War America: Resistance 
          and the Crisis of Masculinity (Durham: Duke UP, 1997); and Steven 
          Bruhm, "Blackmailed by Sex: Tennessee Williams and the Economics 
          of Desire," Modern Drama 34.4 (Dec. 1991): 528-37, where 
          he locates Williams as a "threat to national security" for 
          McCarthy because, being a homosexual, "he harbors a secret which 
          is linked to economic imbalance, and which makes his behavior transgressive" 
          (529).         Thomas P. Adler did recently write in his entry 
          on "Religion" for The Tennessee Williams Encyclopedia (Westport, CN, and London: Greenwood P, 2004) that "Occasionally, 
          the Christian liturgy is inverted in a kind of black mass culminating 
          in cannibalism that signifies a predatory world, as in 'Desire and the 
          Black Masseur' and Suddenly Last Supper" 
          (213). Yet he does not elaborate on his astute comment any.           Leslie Fiedler, 378, 493, xxii.         Toni Morrison, 44.         Toni Morrison, 5.         Toni Morrison, 66. For further reading on "whiteness 
          studies," see the complete volumes of "The White Issue," 
          The Minnesota Review 47 (1996) and "The White Issue," 
          Transition: An International Review 73 (Spring 1998), both         Tennessee Williams, "Desire and the Black 
          Masseur," Collected Stories (New York: Ballantine, 1986), 
          217. All subsequent references to this, or any, story within the collection 
          will appear parenthetically and denoted CS.         In a 1974 interview with Cecil Brown, Williams 
          said, 
          
           
            "Well, the Blacks and the Irish are 
              my two favorite people," and it infuriated him [an Irish journalist 
              in Chicago] because I put Black first. He gave me a bad write-up. 
              (hahaha) So, I've discovered now that one must think no race. I 
              am crazy about the Blacks. And I must say I know people who ask, 
              "Why don't you write about the Blacks?" I said because 
              I would be presumptuous; you know, I don't know the Blacks that 
              way.
 
  I am terribly involved in the Black movement 
              because I think it is the most horrible thing (racism). I think 
              that the White people in America, southern and northern equally  even 
              more northern  have exercised the most dreadful injustices, 
              historically, and even now, discrimination, and not just in terms 
              of jobs. No, that's not where it's at. No, and I wouldn't blame 
              any Black man for looking at me and saying, "There's a red-neck 
            honky," and that he hates me. (Devlin 267) See Cecil Brown, "Interview with Tennessee Williams," Partisan 
            Review, 45 (1978): 276-305, rpt. in Conversations with Tennessee 
            Williams, ed. Albert J. Devlin (Jackson and London: UP of Mississippi, 
            1986).           Bruhm, for instance, 
          sees the cannibalism as "a trope for the social anxiety surrounding 
          homosexuality" (533), while Saddik argues that cannibalism, though 
          used to eradicate homoerotic desire, represents the annihilation of 
          the body and signifies the return to metaphysical wholeness.         Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Between Men: English 
          Literature and Male Homosocial Desire (New York: Columbia UP, 1985), 
          90. See also her The Coherence of Gothic Conventions (New York: 
          Arno, 1980), and René Girard, Deceit, Desire, and the Novel: 
          Self and Other in Literary Structure, trans. Yvonne Freccero (Baltimore: 
          Johns Hopkins UP, 1972).         Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Between Men 94.         Toni Morrison, 13.         For a study that explores how Hawthorne's The 
          House of Seven Gables rewrites "a masterplot of cultural authority 
          and guilt" with the family's concealed history with slavery acting 
          as a "synecdoche of the nation" (130), see Robert K. Martin's 
          "Haunted by Jim Crow: Gothic Fictions by Hawthorne and Faulkner," 
          in Martin and Savoy, 129-42.         Sacvan Bercovitch claims in Rites of Assent (New York: Routledge, 1993) that Hawthorne was never much concerned 
          with "Southern slavery [and] Indian genocide" (236).         Robert Martin informs us that slavery was "the 
          mainstay of the Salem economy and the bartering of human bodies the 
          origin of most New England wealth" (Martin and Savoy, 134).         Nathaniel Hawthorne, Selected Tales and Sketches, 
          ed. Hyatt H. Waggoner (New York: Rhinehart, 1964), 118. All subsequent 
          references to this story will appear parenthetically and denoted STS.         Pierce would later uphold the Fugitive Slave Law 
          by returning the escaped-slave Anthony Burns to his owner Charles Suttle 
          in Virginia. James R. Mellow notes in Nathaniel Hawthorne in His 
          Times (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1980) that the Fugitive Slave Law 
          was the only thing that finally incited Hawthorne to oppose slavery, 
          on which he repeatedly offered conflicting views (409-10). Pierce would 
          later enforce the Fugitive Slave Law upheld by Massachusetts Chief Justice 
          Lemuel Shaw (Herman Melville's father-in-law) two years earlier, by 
          returning the slave Anthony Burns to his owner George F. Suttle in Virginia.         Anthony Burns, a slave turned preacher obsessed 
          with freeing the soul from the body, boarded a ship in Richmond, Virginia, 
          where he was working for a pharmacist on loan from Suttle, bound for 
          Boston. Captured on 24 May 1854 by Suttle on trumped-up charges of theft, 
          Burns was held in a federal courthouse, while Boston abolitionists, 
          led by white minister Thomas Wentworth Higginson, struggled to free 
          him. See Albert J. Von Frank, The Trials of Anthony Burns: Freedom 
          and Slavery in Emerson's Boston (Cambridge: Harvard UP, 1998).         For example, when the Negro breaks Burns's leg 
          during one of their sessions, he lets out a cry so loud that it draws 
          in the proprietor, who says appropriately, "Christ, [. . . ] what's 
          been going on here?" (CS 221). Then, when they are both thrown 
          out of the establishment at "the end of the Lenten season" 
          (CS 221) as a result of their sadomasochistic behavior, the Negro carries 
          the crippled Burns to his room "in the town's Negro section" 
          (CS 221) where for "a week the passion between them continued" 
          (CS 221, emphasis added).         Toni Morrison, 17.         Such visual poetics were exploited in the recent 
          French film adaptation of the story, Noir et blanc, dir. Claire 
          Devers, starring Marc Berman, Francis Frappart, Joséphine Fresson, 
          and Jacques Martial. Films du Volcan, 1986.         Toni Morrison, 33.         For two studies of this story, see Philip C. Kolin's 
          "Tennessee Williams' 'Big Black: A Mississippi Idyll' and Race 
          Relations," Arts and Letters 20.2 (1995): 8-12, and his 
          "'No Masterpiece Has Been Overlooked': The Early Reception and 
          Significance of Tennessee Williams's 'Big Black: A Mississippi Idyll,'" 
          ANQ 8.4 (Fall 1995): 27-34.         Nicholas Moschovakis, "Tennessee Williams's 
          American Blues: From the Early Manuscripts through Menagerie," 
          The Tennessee Williams Annual Review 7 (2005): 21.         John M. Clum rightfully points out how Burns's 
          final thoughts before death  "Yes, it is perfect, he thought, 
          it is now completed" (CS 223)  are "a parody of 
          Christ's last words on the cross, 'Consumatum est'" (132).         In addition to Bruhm's and Clum's articles, for 
          example, see Robley Evans's essay on the trope of eating in the South 
          to undermine identity, "'Or else this were a savage spectacle': 
          Eating and Troping Southern Culture," The Southern Quarterly 30.2-3 (Winter/Spring 1992): 141-49; Andrew Sofer's study of theatrical 
          production and the (absent) human body, "Self-Consuming Artifacts: 
          Power, Performance, and the Body in Tennessee Williams's Suddenly 
          Last Summer," Modern Drama 38.3 (Fall 1995): 336-47; 
          and Lincoln Konkle's examination of the Calvinist influences over Sebastian, 
          "Puritan Paranoia: Tennessee Williams's Suddenly Last Summer as Calvinist Nightmare," American Drama 7.2 (Spring 1998): 
          51-72, which examines how Williams exploits Calvinism as Hawthorne had 
          done in "Young Goodman Brown." For two studies that examine 
          these issues as well but with respect to the Joseph L. Mankiewicz film 
          version, see Kevin Ohi's essay on the erotica of baiting and on the 
          film's use of madness, cannibalism, sodomy, and lobotomy for visual 
          structure, "'Devouring Creation: Cannibalism, Sodomy, and the Scene 
          of Analysis in Suddenly Last Summer," Keyframes: Popular 
          Cinema and Cultural Studies, eds. Matthew Tinkcom and Amy Villarejo 
          (London: Routledge, 2001), 259-79, and D. A. Miller's assessment of 
          the "hetero-structuration of the visual field" (109) in the 
          film, "Visual Pleasure in 1959," Out Takes: Essays on Queer 
          Theory and Film, ed. Ellis Hanson (Durham: Duke UP, 1999), 97-125.         Williams also told Cecil Brown in 1974 what the 
          metaphor of cannibalism meant to him: "Man devours man in a metaphorical 
          sense. He feeds upon his fellow creatures, without the excuse of animals. 
          Animals actually do it for survival, out of hunger. Man, however, is 
          doing it out of, I think, a religious capacity. I use that metaphor 
          to express my repulsion with this characteristic of man, the way people 
          use each other without conscience" (Devlin 274).         John M. Clum has already noted the homoerotic 
          and Eucharistic overtones of the "imitation Christi" 
          (132) here and in the short story, but he glosses over the racial implications 
          in both texts and, if anything, sees black and white as coming together 
          in "an allegory of race relations where perfection, communion, 
          can only come through ritual violence, where cultures meet and atone" 
          (132).         Tennessee Williams, The Theatre of Tennessee 
          Williams (New York: New Directions, 1981-1992), 3:357. All subsequent 
          references to this play or any other in the collection will appear parenthetically 
          with a colon separating volume from page number.         As noted, Morrison has quite a bit to say about 
          the racial encoding of Melville's work, which is subsequently imported 
          into Williams's play through the intertextual references to his allegorical 
          sketches, "The Encantadas, or Enchanted 
          Isles":           
          For while no spectator can deny their claims to 
            a most solemn and superstitious consideration, no more than my firmest 
            resolutions can decline to behold the specter-tortoise when emerging 
            from its shadowy recess; yet even the tortoise, dark and melancholy 
            as it is upon the back, still possesses a bright side; its calipee 
            or breastplate being sometimes of a faint yellowish or golden tinge. 
            Moreover, everyone knows that tortoises as well as turtle are of such 
            a make that if you but put them on their backs you thereby expose 
            their bright sides without the possibility of their recovering themselves, 
            and turning into view the other. But after you have done this, and 
            because you have done this, you should not swear that the tortoise 
            has no dark side. Enjoy the bright, keep it turned up perpetually 
            if you can, but be honest, and don't deny the black. Neither should 
            he who cannot turn the tortoise from its natural position so as to 
            hide the darker and expose his livelier aspect, like a great October 
            pumpkin in the sun, for that cause declare the creature to be one 
            total inky blot. The tortoise is both black and bright. But let us 
            to particulars. 
 See Herman Melville, "The Encantadas, 
          or Enchanted Isles," The Writings of Herman Melville, vol. 
          9 (Evanston: Northwestern UP and Newberry Library, 1987).
  Catherine notably passes from white to black as 
          she moves from procurer to companion, wearing the transparent "one-piece 
          suit made of white lisle" (3:412) to a "decent dark suit" 
          (3:413) after Sebastian has made his homosexual connections.         In an interesting side 
          note, as Brown v. Board of Education celebrates 50 years of age, 
          not only has Central High School become 40 percent black to the 55 percent 
          white student body, the 2000 U.S. census has reported that the Little 
          Rock School District is becoming predominantly black; while white 
          racists might see this increase as proof of black mobilization, the 
          recent publication of the Harvard University's Civil Rights Program 
          points to the fact that the numbers account for an increase in white 
          private school education. Still, segregation is returning to Central 
          High School but in an inverted form that repeats the discrepancies between 
          black and white economic (dis)advantages.         Lorraine Hansberry, A Raisin in the Sun 
          (New York: New American Library, 1958), 101.         Toni Morrison, 33.         Toni Morrison, 52-53.         In a comment to documentarist Harry Rasky (and 
          to C. Robert Jennings during their Playboy interview in April 
          1973), Williams said: 
          
           
             
              I think whatever indigenous culture America has produced has 
                come from the blacks. Our music, our humor mostly, our dancing. 
                The great body of entertainment seems to me to have a black origin. 
                I think that ultimately when the two races, the white and the 
                black, when their blood is mingled, through the passage of time 
                as has already been accomplished to some extent, I think it would 
                produce the handsomest race on earth, and perhaps the strongest. 
                (70)  See Harry Rasky, Tennessee Williams: A Portrait in Laughter 
              and Lamentation (New York: Dodd, Mead, 1986). Williams even 
              added that he "always felt that [he] was black" (70), 
              which could account for why he called himself an octoroon, if even 
              in jest (cf. C. Robert Jennings, "Playboy Interview: Tennessee 
              Williams," Playboy Apr. 1973: 80, and Williams's essay 
              "'Happiness Is Relevant' to Mr. Williams," New York 
              Times 24 Mar. 1968, sec. 2: 3).  Williams deals with black/white miscegenation frequently in his 
              drama and fiction: Cassandra in Battle of Angels is run out 
              of town for having "intimate relations" with a black man; 
              Boss Finley will not let the black blood "adulterate the pure 
              white blood of the South" (4:73); Chicken in Kingdom of 
              Earth has "some black blood in him" (5:201); and the 
              title character of "Miss Coynte of Green" takes it upon 
              her self to begin the "great new race in American" which 
              will inevitably come from "the total mixing together of black 
              and white blood [. . .]" (CS 528-29). Even Lance, the only 
              black ice-skater on the circuit, in Williams's novel Moise and 
              the World of Reason admits to being "a product of miscegenation" 
              (99).             Eric Savoy, "The Face of the Tenant: A Theory 
          of American Gothic" in Martin and Savoy, 6 |