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Mapping intersections: Black women's identities and the politics of home in transnational black American women's fiction.

机译:绘制交叉点:跨国黑人美国女性小说中的黑人女性身份和家庭政治。

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摘要

Transnational black American women writers' literary renderings of "home" evidence an intersectional relationship among black American literature and cultures. This dissertation analyzes, through the trope of home, these authors' portrayals of the multiplicity of experiences informing black American women's lives and identities both domestically and transnationally. Embracing the transnationalism of black American female subjects, as well as a paradigm of intersectionality, this dissertation creates a framework that challenges not only canon formation with regards to black women's literature in the Americas, but also the rigidity surrounding racial/ethnic and national identities generally. To this end, it distinguishes itself from other scholarship that has largely analyzed these women's writings comparatively or within a larger diasporic framework---which, while insightful, tends to undermine the impact and specificity of "New World" or black American cultures.; This dissertation consists of an Introduction that delineates "intersectionality," explicating its significance and relational aspects to what I refer to as "transnational black American." Chapter I analyzes how these black women writers' representations of home problematize "nation"; and, it situates the novels within particular historical, sociopolitical, gendered, and literary contexts. Chapter II investigates Paule Marshall's depictions of African American and Caribbean settings as homespaces integral to protagonist Avey Johnson's black cultural consciousness and healing in Praisesong for the Widow.; Chapter III examines the ways Haiti and the United States serve as sites of female sexual violation in Edwidge Danticat's Breath, Eyes, Memory . Chapter IV analyzes Toni Morrison's and Opal Palmer Adisa's delineations of African American women's attempts to establish a homespace and connection to their "black woman-ness" in transnational black American settings in Tar Baby and It Begins with Tears, respectively. Lastly, the Conclusion underscores this dissertation's significance in its challenging the rigidity of not only African American and Caribbean literary canons and their respective criticisms, but national boundaries and spaces, as well.
机译:跨国黑人女性作家对“家”的文学表现证明了黑人美国文学与文化之间的交叉关系。本文通过对家庭的分析,分析了这些作者对美国黑人女性在国内和跨国生活和身份的了解的多种经历。围绕美国黑人女性主体的跨国主义以及交叉性范式,本论文创建了一个框架,该框架不仅挑战美洲黑人女性文学经典的形成,而且挑战围绕种族/族裔和民族认同的僵化。为此,它有别于其他学者,后者比较或在较大的流散性框架下对这些妇女的著作进行了较大的分析,这些研究虽然有见识,但往往会破坏“新世界”或美国黑人文化的影响和特殊性。本论文包括一个介绍“交叉点”的引言,向我所谓的“跨国黑人美国人”阐述其意义和相关方面。第一章分析了黑人女性作家对家庭的表征如何使“民族”问题化。并将小说置于特定的历史,社会政治,性别和文学语境中。第二章研究了鲍尔·马歇尔对非裔美国人和加勒比环境的描写,这些描写是主角艾维·约翰逊的黑人文化意识和《寡妇颂赞》中的康复所不可或缺的。第三章探讨了海地和美国在Edwidge Danticat的《呼吸,眼睛,记忆》中作为女性性侵犯场所的方式。第四章分析了托尼·莫里森(Toni Morrison)和蛋白石帕尔默·阿迪萨(Opal Palmer Adisa)对非裔美国妇女在跨国黑人美国环境(Tar Baby)和《始于眼泪》中建立家园并与其“黑人女性”的联系的描述。最后,结论强调了本论文的意义,不仅挑战了非洲裔美国和加勒比海文学经典及其批评的僵化,而且还挑战了国界和空间。

著录项

  • 作者

    Duvivier, Sandra Caona.;

  • 作者单位

    University of Massachusetts Amherst.;

  • 授予单位 University of Massachusetts Amherst.;
  • 学科 Literature Comparative.; Black Studies.; Literature Caribbean.; Womens Studies.; Literature American.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2006
  • 页码 244 p.
  • 总页数 244
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类 文学理论;人类学;社会学;
  • 关键词

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