• English 
    • español
    • English
    • français
  • FacebookPinterestTwitter
  • español
  • English
  • français
View Item 
  •   DIGIBUG Home
  • 1.-Investigación
  • Departamentos, Grupos de Investigación e Institutos
  • Departamento de Traducción e Interpretación
  • DTI - Artículos
  • View Item
  •   DIGIBUG Home
  • 1.-Investigación
  • Departamentos, Grupos de Investigación e Institutos
  • Departamento de Traducción e Interpretación
  • DTI - Artículos
  • View Item
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

The Affective Politics of Resistance in the Work of Opal Palmer Adisa

[PDF] 2017_CWW_Affective_ESM_manuscript.pdf (259.5Kb)
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/110707
DOI: 10.1093/cwwrit/vpx016
Exportar
RISRefworksMendeleyBibtex
Estadísticas
View Usage Statistics
Metadata
Show full item record
Author
Serna Martínez, Elisa
Editorial
Oxford University Press
Materia
Opal Palmer Adisa; Caribbean literature; affect; trauma and memory; embodiment; colonial aftermath
 
Opal Palmer Adisa
 
Caribbean literature
 
Affect
 
Date
2017
Referencia bibliográfica
Published version: Serna-Martínez, Elisa. "The Affective Politics of Resistance in the Work of Opal Palmer Adisa." Contemporary Women's Writing. 12, 1, (2017): 11-30. https://doi.org/10.1093/cwwrit/vpx016
Abstract
This article interprets Opal Palmer Adisa’s symbolization of the knee-scraper – a Caribbean woman whose suffering, sometimes unrealized and often unexpressed, gives way to the author’s emphasis on voicing the collective trauma of the region. Scraping one’s knee, in Adisa’s terms, is about recovering the past stories of pain and violence – rather than forgetting them – an act that offers the Afro-Caribbean community the possibility of healing from the symptomatic history of colonialism. Because “the past lives in the very wounds that remain open in the present,” it could be affirmed that Adisa reads her people’s history from their body language and translates it into text. By doing so, Adisa deflates the myth of the angry black woman, which according to Melissa Victoria Harris-Perry, assumes anger as an essential characteristic of black femininity. This essentialist stereotype has for long kept black women from showing their anger. In response, black and postcolonial feminist criticism (i.e., Audre Lorde, Alice Walker, and Sara Ahmed) promotes the exploration of anger, thus enabling black women’s pain to be recognized. Anger, according to Lorde, far from being stuck in the past, opens up the future, guiding life forward like a visionary. Adisa uncovers the source of this anger and then transforms it into narratives of reconciliation and hope. Drawing upon theories on textual embodiment, pain, scars, and anger, I read Adisa’s writings as illustrating pain’s inscription in cultural politics, and as resistance to structural relations of power.
Collections
  • DTI - Artículos

My Account

LoginRegister

Browse

All of DIGIBUGCommunities and CollectionsBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjectFinanciaciónAuthor profilesThis CollectionBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjectFinanciación

Statistics

View Usage Statistics

Servicios

Pasos para autoarchivoAyudaLicencias Creative CommonsSHERPA/RoMEODulcinea Biblioteca UniversitariaNos puedes encontrar a través deCondiciones legales

Contact Us | Send Feedback