44 pages • 1 hour read
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Content Warning: This section of the guide discusses racism and episodes of racially motivated violence, including sexual assault. It also references domestic violence.
The world of Ridge’s novel is characterized by relentless back and forth of criminal, judicial, and vigilante violence. Ridge describes both murders and executions in graphic detail and suggests that the ultimate victims of all this bloodshed are the nation (“our poor bleeding country” [66]) and the natural world.
For Ridge, “prejudice of color” and the “antipathy of races” lie at the root of all this bloodshed (9). Joaquín is a victim of racial hatred and violence, to which he responds with hatred and violence of his own. The novel suggests that the persecution Joaquín experiences is not merely unjust but illogical, with the use of disguise as a recurrent motif calling into question not only the legitimacy of racial hierarchies but even the reality of race itself, except as a social construct. The fact that Joaquín can pass so comfortably as a white American suggests that the apparent differences motivating racial conflict are purely superficial. When the young American hunter seeks to persuade Joaquín to spare his life, he pledges “not as an American citizen, but as a man” (68).
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