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Charles Johnson (1984)
Whole Sight: Notes on New Black FictionCallaloo
G. Schuyler (1931)
Black No More
C. Caruth (1996)
Unclaimed Experience: Trauma, Narrative and History
J. Coleman (1995)
Charles Johnson's Quest for Black Freedom in Oxherding TaleAfrican American Review, 29
Alysson Parker (2010)
"This narrative is no fiction": Mapping Cultural Expressions of Post-Traumatic Slave Disorder
F. Fanon (1952)
Black Skin, White MasksMy Black Stars
R. Eyerman (2001)
Cultural Trauma by Ron Eyerman
Olive Gilbert, Frances Titus
Narrative of Sojourner Truth
E. Grosz (1994)
Volatile Bodies: Toward a Corporeal Feminism
Elaine Ginsberg, D. Pease (1997)
Passing and the Fictions of IdentityJournal of Southern History, 102
Stef Craps, Stef Buelens (2008)
Introduction: Postcolonial Trauma NovelsStudies in the Novel, 40
Chinua Achebe (1964)
Arrow of God
C. Wall (1986)
Passing for what? Aspects of Identity in Nella Larsen's Novels, 20
N. Abraham, M. Torok, N. Rand (1994)
The shell and the kernel : renewals of psychoanalysis
Jane Kuenz (1997)
American Racial Discourse, 1900-1930: Schuyler's Black No MoreNovel: A Forum on Fiction, 30
P. Nazareth, T. Morrison (1992)
Playing in the Dark
[The physical and psychological dismemberment of the African continent and its Diaspora, occasioned by the transatlantic slave trade and colonization, cannot be wished away or repaired by negating the self (past), and therefore remains one of the primary concerns of writers of the Black Atlantic. In spite of their efforts at agency—the deconstruction of racial essentialism—the “passing” characters in the novels discussed in this chapter not only fail to transcend “race” in order to attain freedom, they also deny their selves and historical relevance, thus paradoxically reinforcing that which they intend to challenge. The chapter contends that the phenomenology of “blackness” is historical and that the black body and its traumatic experiences have to be acknowledged and “re-membered” for wholeness to ensue.]
Published: Oct 9, 2018
Keywords: Black Atlantic; White Negro; freedomFreedom; slaverySlavery; Brown Baby
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