Introduction Weaving Texts and Memories Around Toni Morrison s Beloved.
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Authors: | Feith, Michel | Abstract: | In this introduction, Michel Feith problematizes the complex relation between writing and the history of slavery by focusing on two case studies that reconfigure this relation: an examination of the Memorial for the Abolition of Slavery, inaugurated in Nantes, France in 2012, and a triangulation between Toni Morrison s Beloved, and Saidiya Hartman s Scenes of Subjection (1997) and Lose Your Mother (2007). What common ground seems to emerge from these two case studies memory as a sort of compromise formation in the monument, and the varying mixes of ob-jectivity and empathy in the texts is a sense of haunting, accompanied by an always compromised endeavor to lay at rest the ghosts of the Middle Passage. |
Keywords: | history; memory; slavery; Toni Morrison; Saidiya Hartman | Issue Date: | 2014 | Journal/Edited collection: | Black Studies Papers | Issue: | 1 | Start page: | 3 | End page: | 23 | Volume: | 1 | Type: | Artikel/Aufsatz | ISSN: | 2198-7920 | Secondary publication: | no | URN: | urn:nbn:de:gbv:46-00103772-14 | Institution: | Universität Bremen | Faculty: | Fachbereich 10: Sprach- und Literaturwissenschaften (FB 10) | Institute: | English-Speaking Cultures |
Appears in Collections: | Forschungsdokumente |
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