A Comparative Literary History of Modern Slavery
The Atlantic world and beyond
Volume II: Slavery, memory and literature
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ISBN 9789027246240 | EUR 153.00
| USD 199.00
The second volume of A Comparative Literary History of Modern Slavery: The Atlantic world and beyond explores literary memory of enslavement in post-slavery societies on four continents (North- and South America, Africa and Europe). The twenty-two contributors to this volume relate the memory work of literature to central questions of cultural memory, testimony, and the formation of archives. ‘Literature’ here, as in the other volumes of this series, is understood in the broadest sense as textual, visual, auditory, cinematic, and performative genres. The volume asks: What are the central metaphors, storylines and topoi of literary representations of slavery? What kind of identities and political realities are created or enabled by the texts? What are the performative effects of literary language? Post-slavery literature is caught in a double endeavor: vivifying the past, making identification possible while acknowledging the moral distance, and the difficulties of remembering that past. The volume is divided into six sections that take up different aspects and problems of literary memory of slavery: counter-memories/memories of resistance, the body as material archive, fictionality of history writing, the bricolage of history, authorship/authenticity, and the necessity of creative approaches to a history that is troublesome and full of accumulated erasures. A previous volume, Vol. 1, explored slavery and the emotions. The next volume, Vol. 3, will explore authorship and literary culture in relation to slavery.
[Comparative History of Literatures in European Languages, XXXVII] Expected April 2025. vii, 416 pp. + index
Publishing status: In production
© John Benjamins B.V. / Association Internationale de Littérature Comparée
Table of Contents
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Chapter 1. IntroductionKaren-Margrethe Simonsen | pp. 1–21
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Part One. Counter-Memories and memories of resistance
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Chapter 2. “Some slave is rotting in this manorial lake”: Fictions of memory in Derek Walcott and Édouard GlissantMarco Doudin | pp. 24–39
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Chapter 3. Transforming the colonial scene of writing: Erna Brodber’s Nothing’s MatMina Karavanta | pp. 40–53
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Chapter 4. Commemorating slavery during apartheid: The hidden transcripts of the Cape Klopse carnivalAnne Marieke van der Wal | pp. 54–69
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Chapter 5. Gothic tropes and displacements of slave rebellion in Matthew G. Lewis’s Journal of a West India Proprietor (1834)Stephanie M. Volder | pp. 70–87
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Chapter 6. The Memorial ACTe in Guadeloupe: Whitening the dark memory of slavery?Stephanie Mulot | pp. 88–110
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Part Two. The body as material archive
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Chapter 7. Bio-graphies in the broad sense: Narrating the lives and genomes of the enslavedSarah Abel and Gisli Palsson | pp. 112–130
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Chapter 8. Looking at black bodies in painAnna Scacchi | pp. 131–148
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Chapter 9. Performing the neurotic: Memory and black subjectivity in Rivers Solomon’s An Unkindness of GhostsNoni Carter | pp. 149–166
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Part Three. Fictionality as history writing
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Chapter 10. Reimagining slavery from a twenty-first-century perspective: Yaa Gyasi’s Homegoing (2016) and Colson Whitehead’s The Underground Railroad (2016)Isabel Kalous | pp. 168–187
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Chapter 11. Contemporary Scandinavian colonial-historical fiction: Slavery and exceptional whitenessLill-Ann Körber | pp. 188–213
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Chapter 12. The confluence of fiction, historical memory and oral history: The crises of identity and traumatic memories in Ama: A Story of the Atlantic Slave TradeEmmanuel Saboro and Ruth Abeduwah Quansah | pp. 214–228
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Chapter 13. Cinematic slavery: A genealogy of film from 1903 to 2020Steven W. Thomas | pp. 229–252
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Part Four. The cultural bricolage of history: Interdisciplinary perspectives
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Chapter 14. Carrying memory and making meaning: Black identity and the slave pastWendy Wilson-Fall | pp. 254–269
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Chapter 15. Contradicting histories, memories, fictions: A bricolage of slavery in the early-modern French CaribbeanDomna C. Stanton | pp. 270–294
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Chapter 16. The cultural memory of Roma slavery in Europe: Aferim! (2015)Tatiana Petrovich Njegosh | pp. 295–311
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Part Five. Authorship: Authenticity and ambiguity of voice
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Chapter 17. “From Mary’s own lips”: Orality, transcription, and editing in The History of Mary PrinceRaquel Kennon | pp. 314–329
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Chapter 18. Self-expression by black Antillean women: Disempowering self-censorship and remembering historyRoseline Armange | pp. 330–348
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Chapter 19. Creating a new abolitionist literature for children: Lydia Maria Child’s The Juvenile Miscellany (1826–1834) between domesticity and racial hierarchiesSerena Mocci | pp. 349–365
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Part Six. Creative approaches to the memorialization of slavery
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Chapter 20. Hair and body fashion identity narratives in The Return of the Slaves exhibitionOsuanyi Quaicoo Essel | pp. 368–379
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Chapter 21. Filling the blanks in historyFabienne Kanor | pp. 380–393
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Chapter 22. A people made of mud: An archaeological tale of enslavement at beef jerky plantations, Southern BrazilLino J. Zabala and Elis Meza | pp. 394–410
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Volume 2. Biographical descriptions | pp. 411–416
Subjects
Literature & Literary Studies
Main BIC Subject
DSB: Literary studies: general
Main BISAC Subject
LIT024000: LITERARY CRITICISM / Modern / General