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Trauma and Spirituality in Ethnic American Women's Novels examines a genre of ethnic American women's literature, which the author calls spiritual trauma narratives, that testify to traumas caused by epistemological violence, wreaked by ongoing colonialism, systematic racism, and marginalization grounded in a binary, hierarchical, and supremacist post-Enlightenment epistemology that negates the spiritual knowledge of interconnectivity found in people of color's belief systems. Placing trauma theory in productive conversation with women of color feminist studies, Marinella Rodi-Risberg explores literary texts by Chicana, African American, and Native American authors that engage readers in the protagonists' transformative encounters with ancestral knowledge through symbols, ritual, dreaming, storytelling, and interactions with the natural world. In this way, the author argues, they model a shift in awareness regarding historical and present traumas including slavery, genocide, racial and sexual violence, highlighting the importance of literature as a site of knowledge production and resistance.
First book to examine trauma and spirituality in contemporary ethnic women's fiction as a site of resistance Chapters explore literary texts by Chicana, African American and Native American authors Takes an interdisciplinary approach, combining trauma theory with women of color feminist studies
Auteur
Marinella Rodi-Risberg is Affiliated Researcher, Department of Language and Communication Studies, University of Jyväskylä, Finland, and author of Intersectional Trauma in American Women Writers' Incest Novels from the 1990s (2022). She has published on trauma in book chapters, including in Trauma and Literature (2018), and journal articles in, among others, American Indian Quarterly, Ecozon@, Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction.
Texte du rabat
Trauma and Spirituality in Ethnic American Women's Novels highlights the transformative potential of literature as a site for reclaiming spiritual knowledge, fostering resilience, and prompting social change through an awareness of interconnectedness. It offers a valuable critique of the Eurocentric focus of existing trauma studies and emphasises the need to incorporate non-Western spiritual practices and belief systems.
Stella Setka, Associate Professor of English, West Los Angeles College
"With impeccable scholarship and new contributions to cultural directions for trauma studies and its relation to ethnic women's literature, Rodi-Risberg investigates how contemporary women writers, through spiritual trauma narratives, enact challenges to colonizing mindsets that have devalued indigenous cultures and women."
Laurie Vickroy, Professor Emerita, Bradley University
Trauma and Spirituality in Ethnic American Women's Novels examines a genre of ethnic American women's literature, which the author calls spiritual trauma narratives, that testify to traumas caused by epistemological violence, wreaked by ongoing colonialism, systematic racism, and marginalization grounded in a binary, hierarchical, and supremacist post-Enlightenment epistemology that negates the spiritual knowledge of interconnectivity found in people of color's belief systems. Placing trauma theory in productive conversation with women of color feminist studies, Marinella Rodi-Risberg explores literary texts by Chicana, African American, and Native American authors that engage readers in the protagonists' transformative encounters with ancestral knowledge through symbols, ritual, dreaming, storytelling, and interactions with the natural world. In this way, the author argues, they model a shift in awareness regarding historical and present traumas including slavery, genocide, racial and sexual violence, highlighting the importance of literature as a site of knowledge production and resistance.
Marinella Rodi-Risberg is Affiliated Researcher, Department of Language and Communication Studies, University of Jyväskylä, Finland, and author of Intersectional Trauma in American Women Writers' Incest Novels from the 1990s (2022). She has published on trauma in book chapters, including in Trauma and Literature (2018), and journal articles in, among others, American Indian Quarterly, Ecozon@, Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction.
Résumé
Trauma and Spirituality in Ethnic American Women's Novels examines a genre of ethnic American women's literature, which the author calls spiritual trauma narratives, that testify to traumas caused by epistemological violence, wreaked by ongoing colonialism, systematic racism, and marginalization grounded in a binary, hierarchical, and supremacist post-Enlightenment epistemology that negates the spiritual knowledge of interconnectivity found in people of color's belief systems. Placing trauma theory in productive conversation with women of color feminist studies, Marinella Rodi-Risberg explores literary texts by Chicana, African American, and Native American authors that engage readers in the protagonists' transformative encounters with ancestral knowledge through symbols, ritual, dreaming, storytelling, and interactions with the natural world. In this way, the author argues, they model a shift in awareness regarding historical and present traumas including slavery, genocide, racial and sexual violence, highlighting the importance of literature as a site of knowledge production and resistance.
Contenu
.- Chapter 1: Narrative as Spiritual Work.
.- Chapter 2: A Prayer for Healing and Spiritual Transformation: Trauma and Curanderismo in Alma Luz Villanueva's Naked Ladies.
.- Chapter 3: The Love of Yemoja: Trauma and Africana Spirituality in Toni Morrison's Novel.
.- Chapter 4: Historical Trauma, Sacred Geography, and Tribal Knowledge in Louise Erdrich's The Round House.
.- 5.Conclusion.