A literatura contemporânea de mulheres negras nos Estados Unidos e no Brasil: possíveis articulações diaspóricas
Resumen
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.Descargas
Los datos de descargas todavía no están disponibles.
Descargas
Publicado
2015-12-21
Cómo citar
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/ojs2/index.php/artemis/article/view/27051. Acesso em: 22 dic. 2024.
Número
Sección
Artigos