A literatura contemporânea de mulheres negras nos Estados Unidos e no Brasil: possíveis articulações diaspóricas

Authors

  • Flávia Santos de Araújo

Abstract

This essay aims at delineating a panoramic analysis of contemporary black women’s writings in the U.S. and Brazil in order to examine how these writings establish a dialogic relationship with each other across the diasporic space in the Americas. Taking on Brent Edwards conceptualizations of diaspora (2003), I will argue that contemporary Afro-Brazilian and U.S. Afro-American women writers re-write the black female body into literary representations of multi-layered racial, gender and sexual discourses. Read against and with each other, their writings contribute to re-elaborate universalizing notions of selfhood and the complexities of subjectivity, while retaining a sense of cultural and historical specifi city. Within a comparative and transnational approach, this essay will discuss some of the writings by Conceição Evaristo, Miriam Alves, Esmeralda Ribeiro, Cristiane Sobral, and Elisa Lucinda (Brazil); as well as some of the works by Audre Lorde, June Jordan, Toni Morrison, Gayl Jones, and Danzy Senna (U.S.), among others.

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Published

2015-12-21

How to Cite

SANTOS DE ARAÚJO, F. A literatura contemporânea de mulheres negras nos Estados Unidos e no Brasil: possíveis articulações diaspóricas. Revista Ártemis, [S. l.], v. 20, 2015. Disponível em: https://periodicos.ufpb.br/ojs/index.php/artemis/article/view/27051. Acesso em: 22 dec. 2024.