double consciousness

English

Noun

double consciousness (uncountable)

  1. The awareness of an African American of having two selves, their inward self and the self, created by how white people see them.
    • 2008, Danny Sexton, “Lifting the Veil: Revision and Double-Consciousness in Rita Dove’s The Darker Face of the Earth”, in Callaloo[1], page 778:
      Double-consciousness is the African American’s awareness of possessing two souls: an outward self based largely on how whites perceive him and an inward self that he comes to realize as his truer self.
    • 1999, Lois Tyson, chapter 11, in Critical Theory Today: A User-Friendly Guide, page 368:
      Postcolonial theorists often describe the colonial subject as having a double consciousness or double vision, in other words, a consciousness or way of perceiving the world that is divided between two antagonistic worlds, a consciousness or way of perceiving the world that is divided between two antagonistic cultures: that of the colonizer and that of the indigenous community.