Cover image for Africana Women Writers : Performing Diaspora, Staging Healing.
Africana Women Writers : Performing Diaspora, Staging Healing.
Title:
Africana Women Writers : Performing Diaspora, Staging Healing.
Author:
Marzette, DeLinda.
ISBN:
9781453901885
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (166 pages)
Series:
Studies on Themes and Motifs in Literature ; v.108

Studies on Themes and Motifs in Literature
Contents:
Cover -- Table of Contents -- Acknowledgments ix -- Introduction: Performing Diaspora, Staging Healing 1 -- 1. Making Rite: W/Riting Renewal in an Age of Lunacy in Selected Works of Nicole Werewere Liking 11 -- 2. Coming to Voice: Navigating the Interstices in Plays by Winsome Pinnock 29 -- 3. Diasporic Fissures and Afro-Caribbean Identity in the Plays of Simone Schwarz-Bart and Maryse Condé 55 -- 4. Who Measures the Power of Woman in Spoons and Scales? Womens' Worth in Tess Onwueme's Tell it to Women 83 -- 5. For Colored Girls: Treading Storms, Discovering Rainbows 107 -- Conclusion: Voyages of Diaspora: Africana Women Playwrights 131 -- Notes 137 -- Bibliography 145.
Abstract:
Africana Women Writers: Performing Diaspora, Staging Healing focuses on contemporary literary works, plays in particular, written after 1976 by Africana women writers. From a cross-cultural, transnational perspective, the author examines how these women writers - emanating from Cameroon (Nicole Werewere Liking), Britain (Winsome Pinnock), Guadeloupe (Maryse Conde and Simone Schwartz-Bart), Nigeria (Tess Onwueme), and the United States (Ntozake Shange) - move beyond static, conventional notions regarding blackness and being female and reconfigure newer identities and spaces to thrive. DeLinda Marzette explores the numerous ways these women writers create black female agency and vital, energizing communities. Contextually, she uses the term diaspora to refer to the mass dispersal of peoples from their homelands - herein Africa - to other global locations; objects of diasporic dispersal, these individuals then become a kind of migrant, physically and psychologically. Each author shares a diasporic heritage; hence, much of their subjects, settings, and themes express diaspora consciousness. Marzette explores who these women are, how they define themselves, how they convey and experience their worlds, how they broach, loosen, and explode the multiple yokes of race, class, and gender-based oppression and exploitation in their works. What is fostered, encouraged, shunned, ignored - the spoken, the unspoken and, perhaps, the unspeakable - are all issues of critical exploration. Ultimately, all the women of this study depend on female bonds for survival, enrichment, healing, and hope. The plays by these women are especially important in that they add a diverse dimension to the standard dramatic canon.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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