Winner of a 2023 Edited Collection Award from the South Atlantic Modern Language Association
Contributions by Cécile Accilien, Maria Rice Bellamy, Gwen Bergner, Olga Blomgren, Maia L. Butler, Isabel Caldeira, Nadège T. Clitandre, Thadious M. Davis, Joanna Davis-Mc Elligatt, Laura Dawkins, Megan Feifer, Delphine Gras, Akia Jackson, Tammie Jenkins, Shewonda Leger, Jennifer M. Lozano, Marion Christina Rohrleitner, Thomás Rothe, Erika V. Serrato, Lucía Stecher, and Joyce White
Narrating History, Home, and Dyaspora: Critical Essays on Edwidge Danticat contains fifteen essays addressing how Edwidge Danticat’s writing, anthologizing, and storytelling trace, (re)construct, and develop alternate histories, narratives of nation building, and conceptions of home and belonging. The prolific Danticat is renowned for novels, collections of short fiction, nonfiction, and editorial writing. As her experimentation in form expands, so does her force as a public intellectual. Danticat’s literary representations, political commentary, and personal activism have proven vital to classroom and community work imagining radical futures. Among increasing anti-immigrant sentiment and containment and rampant ecological volatility, Danticat’s contributions to public discourse, art, and culture deserve sustained critical attention. These essays offer essential perspectives to scholars, public intellectuals, and students interested in African diasporic, Haitian, Caribbean, and transnational American literary studies. This collection frames Danticat’s work as an indictment of statelessness, racialized and gendered state violence, and the persistence of political and economic margins.
The first section of this volume, “The Other Side of the Water, ” engages with Danticat’s construction and negotiation of nation, both in Haiti and the United States; the broader
dyaspora; and her own, her family’s, and her fictional characters’ places within them. The second section, “Welcoming Ghosts, ” delves into the ever-present specter of history and memory, prominent themes found throughout Danticat’s work. From origin stories to broader Haitian histories, this section addresses the underlying traumas involved when remembering the past and its relationship to the present. The third section, “I Speak Out, ” explores the imperative to speak, paying particular attention to the narrative form with which such telling occurs. The fourth and final section, “Create Dangerously, ” contends with Haitians’ activism, community building, and the political and ecological climate of Haiti and its
dyaspora.
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Megan Feifer is a Teacher-Scholar in Residence at the bell hooks center at Berea College. Her research and teaching interests focus on the counter-archives contemporary Afro-diasporic writers produced in response to what Anne Mc Clintock terms the “official ghosting, ” or inability/unwillingness of nations to confront and account for the “past.” Her work has been published in Palimpsest: A Journal on Women, Gender, and the Black International; Bloomsbury Handbook to Edwidge Danticat; and Revisiting the Elegy in the Black Lives Matter Era. She is cofounder of the Edwidge Danticat Society and cocreator of bellhooksarchive.com, a digital repository of select artifacts from the bell hooks papers currently housed in the Special Collections and Archives of Berea College.