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Re-imagining diaspora, reclaiming home in contemporary African-American fiction /Kim, Junyon, January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Oregon, 2004. / Typescript. Includes vita and abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 223-239). Also available for download via the World Wide Web; free to University of Oregon users.
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Quiet Dawn: Time, Aesthetics, and the Afterlives of Black RadicalismCunningham, Nijah N. January 2015 (has links)
Quiet Dawn: Time, Aesthetics, and the Afterlives of Black Radicalism traces the unfulfilled utopian aspirations of the revolutionary past that haunt the present of the African diaspora. Taking its name from the final track on famed black nationalist musician Archie Shepp’s 1972 Attica Blues, this dissertation argues that the defeat of black radical and anticolonial projects witnessed during the turbulent years of the sixties and seventies not only represent past “failures” but also point to a freedom that has yet to arrive. Working at the convergence of literature, performance, and visual culture, Quiet Dawn argues that the unfinished projects of black and anticolonial revolution live on as radical potentialities that linger in the archive like a “haunting refrain.” Quiet Dawn offers a theory the haunting refrain of black sociality that emanates across seemingly disparate geopolitical nodes. The concept of the haunting refrain designates an affective register through which otherwise hidden and obscure regions of the past can be apprehended. The dissertation attends to the traces of black sociality that linger in the archive through an examination of the literary and critical works of black intellectuals such as Amiri Baraka, Nikki Giovanni, Kamau Brathwaite, Sylvia Wynter, Frantz Fanon, and Léopold Sédar Senghor. Rather than lay claim to political heroes, Quiet Dawn turns to the past in an attempt to give an account of the dispersed social forces that gathered around the promise of a black world. Each chapter offers an example of the haunting refrain of black social life that lingers in the past. In this way, the dissertation as a whole gives an account of the radical potentialities that register as hums, echoes, muted chants, and shadow songs of the “long sixties.” Quiet Dawn contributes to scholarship on black internationalism and intervenes in current critical debates around race, gender, and sexual violence in the fields of black studies, feminist studies, and postcolonial studies. Its theorization of black social life as a spectral presence is an attempt at attending to the other others that haunt contemporary critiques of power which merely seek redemption in an irredeemable world. To be sure, this project strikes neither an optimistic nor pessimistic note. Rather, it is rooted in the belief that there are infinite amounts of hope that we have yet to apprehend.
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Performing translation the transnational call-and-response of African diaspora literature /Jakubiak, Katarzyna. Dykstra, Kristin. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Illinois State University, 2006. / Title from title page screen, viewed on January 18, 2008. Dissertation Committee: Kristin Dykstra (chair), Christopher Breu, Christopher DeSantis. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 220-237) and abstract. Also available in print.
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A theory of Yere-Wolo coming-of-age narratives in African diaspora literature /Ford, Na'Imah Hanan, January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Missouri-Columbia, 2007. / The entire dissertation/thesis text is included in the research.pdf file; the official abstract appears in the short.pdf file (which also appears in the research.pdf); a non-technical general description, or public abstract, appears in the public.pdf file. Title from title screen of research.pdf file (viewed on March 12, 2009) Includes bibliographical references.
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Intra- and inter-continental migrations and diaspora in contemporary African fictionMoudouma Moudouma, Sydoine 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (PhD)--Stellenbosch University, 2013. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: The focus of this dissertation is the examination of the relationship between space and
identity in recent narratives of migration, in contemporary African literature. Migrant
narratives suggest that there is a correlation between identity formation and the types of
boundaries and borders migrants engage with in their various attempts to find new
homes away from their old ones. Be it voluntary or involuntary, the process of migrating
from a familial place transforms the individual who has to negotiate new social
formations; and tensions often accrue from the confrontation between one’s culture and
the culture of the receiving society. Return migration to the supposed country of origin
is an equally important trajectory dealt with in African migrant literature. The reverse
narrative stipulates similar tensions between one’s diasporic culture – the culture of the
diasporic space – and the culture of the homeland. Thus, intra- and inter-continental
migrations and diaspora is a bifurcated inquiry that examines both outward and return
migrations. These movements reveal the ways in which Africans make sense of their
Africanity and their place in the world.
The concepts of “border”, “boundary” and “borderland” are useful to examine
notions of difference and separation both within the nation-state and in relation to
transnational, intra-African as well as inter-continental exchanges. I focus more fully on
these notions in the texts that examine migrations within Africa, both outward and return
movements. This study is not only interested in the physical features of borders,
boundaries or borderlands, but also on their consequences for the processes of identity
formation and translation, and how they can help to reveal the social and historical
characteristics of diasporic formations. What undergirds much of the analysis is the
assumption that the negotiation of belonging and space cannot be separated from the
crossing or breaching of borders and boundaries; and that these negotiations entail
attempts to enter the borderland, which is a zone of exchange, crisscrossing networks,
dissolution of notions of singularity and exclusive identities. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Die fokus van hierdie proefskrif is ‘n ondersoek na die verhouding tussen ruimte en
identiteit in onlangse migrasie-narratiewe in kontemporêre Afrika-literatuur. Migrasienarratiewe
dui op ’n korrelasie tussen identiteitsvorming en die soorte skeidings en
grense waarmee migrante gemoeid raak in hulle onderskeie pogings om nuwe tuistes
weg van die oues te vind. Hetsy willekeurig of gedwonge, die migrasieproses weg van
’n familiale plek verander die individu wat nuwe sosiale formasies moet oorkom, en
spanning neem dikwels toe weens die konfrontasie tussen die eie kultuur en dié van die
ontvangersamelewing. Migrasie terug na die sogenaamde land van herkoms is net so ’n
belangrike onderwerp in Afrika-migrasieliteratuur. Die terugkeernarratief stipuleer dat
daar ooreenkomstige spanning heers tussen ’n persoon se diasporiese kultuur – die
kultuur van die diaspora-ruimte – en die kultuur van die land van oorsprong. Die
ondersoek na intra- en interkontinentale migrasies en diasporas is dus ’n tweeledige
proses wat uitwaartse sowel as terugkerende migrasies beskou. Hierdie bewegings
openbaar die ware maniere waarop Afrikane sin maak uit hulle Afrikaniteit en hulle plek
in die wêreld.
Die konsepte van “grens”, “grenslyn” en “grensgebied” is nuttig wanneer die
begrippe van verskil en verwydering ondersoek word binne die nasiestaat asook in
verhouding tot transnasionale, intra-Afrika en interkontinentale wisseling. Ek fokus
meer volledig op hierdie begrippe in die tekste wat ondersoek instel na migrasie binne
Afrika, beide uitwaartse en terugkerende bewegings. Hierdie studie gaan nie net oor die
fisiese kenmerke van grense, grenslyne en grensgebiede nie, maar bestudeer ook die
gevolge daarvan op die prosesse van identiteitsvorming en vertaling, en die manier
waarop hulle kan help om die sosiale en historiese eienskappe van diasporiese formasies
te openbaar. ’n Groot deel van die analise word ondersteun deur die aanname dat die
onderhandeling tussen tuishoort en ruimte nie geskei kan word van die oorsteek of
deurbreek van grense en grenslyne nie, en dat hierdie onderhandelinge lei tot pogings
om die grensgebied te betree, waar die grensgebied gekenmerk word deur wisseling,
kruising van netwerke en die verwording van begrippe soos sonderlingheid en
eksklusiewe identiteite.
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Re-visiting history, re-negotiating identity in two black British fictions of the 21st Century: Caryl Phillips’s A distant shore (2003) and Buchi Emecheta’s The new tribe (2000)Moudouma Moudouma, Sydoine 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA (English Literature))--University of Stellenbosch, 2009. / Notions of home, belonging, and identity haunt the creative minds of fiction writers belonging to and imagining the African diaspora. Detailing the ways in which two diasporic authors “re-visit history” and “re-negotiate identity”, this thesis grapples with the complexity of these notions and explores the boundaries of displacement and the search for new home-spaces. Finally, it engages with the ways in which both authors produce “new tribes” beyond the bounds of national or racial imaginaries.
Following the “introduction”, the second chapter titled “River Crossing” offers a reading of Caryl Phillips’s A Distant Shore, which features a black African man fleeing his home-country in search of asylum in England. Here, I explore Phillips’s representation of the “postcolonial passage” to the north, and of the “shock of arrival” in England. I then analyse the ways in which the novel enacts a process of “messing with national identity”. While retracing the history of post-Windrush migration to England in order to engage contemporary immigration, A Distant Shore, I argue, also re-visits the trans-Atlantic slave trade. In the final section, I discuss “the economy of asylum” as I explore the fates of the novel’s two central characters: the African asylum-seeker and the outcast white English woman.
My reading aims to advance two points made by the novel. Firstly, that individuals are not contained by the nations and cultures they belong to; rather, they are owned by the circumstances that determine the conditions of their displacement. Phillips strives to tell us that individuals remain the sites at which exclusionary discourses and theories about race, belonging and identity are re-elaborated. Secondly, I argue that no matter the effort exerted in trying to forget traumatic pasts in order to re-negotiate identity elsewhere, individuals remain prisoners of the chronotopes they have inhabited at the various stages of their passages.
The third chapter focuses on Buchi Emecheta’s The New Tribe. Titled “Returning Home?”, it explores the implications of Emecheta’s reversal of the trajectory of displacement from diasporic locations to Africa. The New Tribe allows for the possibility of re-imagining the Middle Passage and re-figuring the controversial notion of the return to roots. In the novel, a young black British man embarks on a journey to Africa in search of a mythic lost kingdom. While not enabling him to return to roots, this journey eventually encourages him to come to terms with his diasporic identity.
Continuing to grapple with notions of “home”, now through the trope of family and by engaging the “rhetoric of return”, I explore how Emecheta re-visits the past in order to produce new identities in the present. Emecheta’s writing reveals in particular the gendered consequences of the “rhetoric of return”. Narratives of return to Africa, the novel suggests, revisit colonial fantasies and foster patriarchal gender bias. The text juxtaposes such metaphors against the lived experience of black women in order to demythologise the return to Africa and to redirect diasporic subjects to the diasporic locations that constitute genuine sites for re-negotiating identity.
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The Poetics of Endurance: Managing Natural Variation in the Atlantic WorldDzyak, Katrina January 2024 (has links)
This dissertation argues that Anglophone writers across the nineteenth-century Atlantic World can be seen trying to represent specific natural worlds as intentionally produced by the cultural practices of Indigenous or African Diasporic people. The case studies that support this argument include the work of Anne Wollstonecraft, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Herman Melville, and Gilbert Wilson, and they respectively travel from the plantation worlds of Matanzas, Cuba amidst the island’s “sugar revolution,” New England river wetlands but especially the unrelenting persistence of swamps, desert island archipelagos in the Pacific just before the Guano Wars, and the upper Missouri River basin beds increasingly enclosed by United States military installations.
Reading each writer’s representation of these natural and social worlds through the framework of ‘land management,’ this thesis proposes a way of registering and tracing their shared attempt to discern practices that all center around the reproduction of ‘natural variation.’ It contends that these nineteenth-century attempts to observe, speculate, or imagine instances of natural variation, each as a product of Indigenous or African Diasporic land management practices be read as a form of poetics, which this dissertation defines as the rhetorical appropriation and reconfiguration of previous modes of discourse (as opposed to an idea of raw innovation). Here, Wollstonecraft, Hawthorne, Melville, and Wilson each renegotiate the colonial justification narrative, official orders of natural history, the perspective of the travel log, and early ethnographic anthropology, in order to represent myriad relationships between natural resilience and subaltern ‘survivance,’ the convergence of which this dissertation ultimately names ‘endurance.’ Finally, we might think of each renegotiation as itself a form of ‘management’ by which these writers respectively highlight their understanding of literature’s role in empire, but do so, in the hopes of rerouting this relay so that representations of nature come to include the role of cultural practices of land management. This archive of ‘endurance’ might be read, then, as the result of disparate authors who all nevertheless believe that literary work might actually help restore and sustain cultural and environmental realities.
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Traveling discourses subjectivity, space and spirituality in black women's speculative fictions in the Americas /Jones, Esther L. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Ohio State University, 2006. / Available online via OhioLINK's ETD Center; full text release delayed at author's request until 2011 Aug 15
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States of nomadism, conditions of diaspora : studies in writing between South Africa and the United States, 1913-1936.Courau, Rogier Philippe. January 2008 (has links)
Using the theoretical idea of ‘writing between’ to describe the condition
of the travelling subject, this study attempts to chart some of the literary,
intellectual and cultural connections that exist(ed) between black South
African intellectuals and writers, and the experiences of their African-
American counterparts in their common movements towards civil liberty,
enfranchisement and valorised consciousness. The years 1913-1936 saw
important historical events taking place in the United States, South Africa
and the world – and their effects on the peoples of the African diaspora
were signficant. Such events elicited unified black diasporic responses to
colonial hegemony. Using theories of transatlantic/transnational cultural
negotiation as a starting point, conceptualisations that map out, and give
context to, the connections between transcontinental black experiences of
slavery and subjugation, this study seeks to re-envisage such black South
African and African-American intellectual discourses through reading them
anew. These texts have been re-covered and re-situated, are both published
and unpublished, and engage the notion of travel and the instability of
transatlantic voyaging in the liminal state of ‘writing between’. With my
particular regional focus, I explore the cultural and intellectual politics of
these diasporic interrelations in the form of case studies of texts from several
genres, including fiction and autobiography. They are: the travel writings
of Xhosa intellectual, DDT Jabavu, with a focus on his 1913 journey to the
United States; an analysis of Ethelreda Lewis’s novel, Wild Deer (1933), which
imagines the visit of an African-American musician, Paul Robeson-like figure
to South Africa; and Eslanda Goode Robeson’s representation of her African
Journey (1945) to the country in 1936, and the traveller’s gaze as expressed
through the ethnographic imagination, or the anthropological ‘eye’ in the text. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2008.
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