Fantasies of Identification. Ellen Samuels
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In this context, the fear that the extension of social support to those with disabilities would encourage fraud was amplified by many centuries of symbolic association of physical disabilities with evil portent, moral failing, and sexual transgression.12 While it may seem illogical that the association of “real” disability with evil would lead to a suspicion that certain disabled persons were faking their conditions, this metaphorical tangle has emerged necessarily from the strenuous efforts to define the boundaries between real and fake disabilities. The extremely contingent nature of disability itself means that any such boundaries are hopelessly fluid, allowing symbolic and actual meanings to bleed freely across them—a process that continues to this day.13 In addition, and through a further tortured logic, the symbolic association of disability with immorality, dishonesty, and laziness is reflected and produced by racist ideologies that associate these characteristics with nonwhite peoples, ideologies voiced in Melville’s novel through such characters as the Indian-hater: “Indian lying, Indian theft, Indian double dealing, Indian fraud and perfidy” (The Confidence Man 126) and descriptions of the evil Goneril, who is repeatedly compared to an “Indian” or “squaw” (50-53). Thus, just as the very fact of Guinea’s disability symbolically suggests he is faking it, so paradoxically the fact of his blackness may symbolically suggest that he must be faking that as well.
In all these cases the tension produced is between inner and outer states of being, a tension that pervades the novel and surfaces in many instances, such as the Philosophical Intelligence Officer’s analogical defense of boys, in which he proceeds “by analogy from the physical to the moral” (The Confidence Man 104), Mark Winsome’s metaphor of the snake’s rattle as a warning “label” (163), and the barber’s disquisition on the false nature of man as seen through the use of wigs, fake mustaches, and hair dyes (199). Mitchell and Snyder thus read Melville’s novel as a critique of the “sciences of the surface,” which dominated both medical and social understandings of the relationship between bodily surfaces and inner essences during the nineteenth century (Cultural Locations 37–39).14 Phrenology, physiognomy, craniometry, and palmistry all claimed to give essential information about a person’s moral character and abilities by examining external features such as head shape and hand contours. Indeed much of The Confidence Man lends itself to such a critique; yet the fact that Mitchell and Snyder do not distinguish between real and fake disabilities in their analysis means that its full implications are not yet realized. This becomes an even more urgent issue when we consider how race and disability function in mutually constitutive ways to further undercut the assumptions of surface identifications, not only within the novel but in contemporary critics’ interpretations of its meanings.
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