This book explores the intersections of sexualized, gendered, and racialized traumas in five US novels about father-daughter incest from the 1990s. It examines how incest can be connected to wider past and present structural oppression and institutional abuse, and what fiction looks like that testifies against and references a historical background of slavery, poverty, settler colonialism, annexation, and immigration. Investigating the means of resistance used against attempts at silencing and denial in these texts, the book also shows how contemporary women’s novels can propose social change. Overall, this study uniquely argues that the individual trauma of incest in these texts must be understood in relation to histories of and present collective wounding against marginalized communities. By sitting at the intersections between trauma theory and US third world feminism, it allows for theory to meet literary activism.
Spis treści
Chapter 1: Introduction: Contextualizing the Wound and the Political Literary Voice in the Theory of Trauma.- Chapter 2: Trauma, Temporality, and Testimony:
The Enslaved Daughter’s Body in Carolivia Herron’s Thereafter Johnnie
.- Chapter 3: Trauma, “Trash, ” and Memory in Dorothy Allison’s
Bastard out of Carolina.- Chapter 4: Betty Louise Bell’s
Faces in the Moon: Trauma, Settler Colonialism, and Storytelling
.- Chapter 5: Transnational Trauma and Testimonio in Denise Chávez’s
Face of an Angel.- Chapter 6: Trauma, Survival, and Intertextuality in Patricia Chao’s
Monkey King.- Chapter 7: Conclusion: Trauma and Resistance in a Literary Third Voice at the Intersections.
O autorze
Marinella Rodi-Risberg is an affiliated researcher at the Department of Language and Communication Studies, University of Jyväskylä, Finland. She has published on representations of trauma in journals and chapters, including in
Trauma and Literature (2018), and is co-editor of
Transnational Crime Fiction: Mobility, Borders, and Detection (2020).