Black feminism and traumatic legacies in contemporary African American literature

著者

    • Lewis, Apryl

書誌事項

Black feminism and traumatic legacies in contemporary African American literature

Apryl Lewis

(Reading trauma and memory / Aimee Pozorski and Nicholas Ealy)

Lexington Books, c2023

  • : cloth

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注記

Includes bibliographical references (p. 133-138) and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Black Feminism and Traumatic Legacies in Contemporary African American Literature employs an analysis of select African American novels and applies trauma studies and Black Feminist Studies to explain the significance of trauma and traumatic experiences that stem from slavery and how this advances scholarly discussions about African American literature. Using the crooked room theory from Melissa Harris-Perry's Sister Citizen (2011), the author argues that the traumatic legacy of slavery is the "crooked room" that African Americans, especially Black women, are forced to navigate to facilitate healing. Much like trauma, healing is not a linear concept, and healing is more about reclaiming oneself in the aftermath of traumatic experiences. An intersectional approach facilitated by Black Feminist Studies is pivotal for uplifting the traumatic experiences of African Americans, especially women, that does justice to their specific histories. Although slavery is pushed out of public awareness because of people who are uncomfortable with confronting slavery's traumatic magnitude on the Black community, African American literature is not removed from discussing past and present traumas that are pervasive in the Black community.

目次

Introduction Chapter 1: "Not the Being Lost, but the Being Found": Traumatic Legacy and the Search for Home in Yaa Gyasi's Homegoing Chapter 2: What Becomes of Injustice? Shame and the Obligation of Remembrance and Love in Tayari Jones' An American Marriage Chapter 3: Reclaiming the Ghosts of Trauma's Past: Witnessing and Testimony as Healing in Jesmyn Ward's Sing, Unburied, Sing Chapter 4: Cora's Resilience: The Magnitude of Trauma and Freedom in Colson Whitehead's The Underground Railroad Conclusion

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