Conjuring Trauma with (Self)Derision: The African and African-American Epistolary Fiction

  • Ousmane Ngom Université Gaston Berger, St-Louis Départementd’Anglais, Senegal

Abstract

All the female narrators of the three stories examined here – So Long a Letter, The Color Purple, and Letters from France – suffer serious traumas attributable to their male counterparts. Thus as a healing process, letter-writing is an exercise in trust that traverses the distances between the addresser and the addressee. Blurring the lines in such a way results in an intimate narration of trauma that reads as a stream of consciousness, devoid of fear of judgment or retribution. This paper studies the literary device of derision coupled with a psycho-feminist analysis to retrace the thorny, cathartic journey of trauma victims from self-hate to self-acceptance and self-agency.

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Published
2018-01-31
How to Cite
Ngom, O. (2018). Conjuring Trauma with (Self)Derision: The African and African-American Epistolary Fiction. European Scientific Journal, ESJ, 14(2), 1. https://doi.org/10.19044/esj.2018.v14n2p1