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Women Writing Trauma in the Global South: A Study of Aminatta Forna, Isabel Allende and Anuradha Roy PDF

180 Pages·2022·3.314 MB·English
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Women Writing Trauma in the Global South Through exploring complex suffering in the writings of Aminatta Forna, Isabel Allende and Anuradha Roy, Women Writing Trauma in the Global South dismantles conceptual shortcomings and problematic imbalances at the core of existing theorizations around psychological trauma. The global constellation of women writers from Sierra Leone, Chile and India facilitates a productive analysis of how the texts navigate intertwined experiences of individual and systemic trauma. The discussion departs from a recent critical turn in literary and cultural trauma studies and transgresses many interrelated boundaries of geocultural contexts, lan- guage and genre. Discovering the role of literary forms in reparative articulation and empathic witnessing, this critical intervention develops new ideas for an inclusive conceptual expansion of trauma from the global peripheries and contributes to the ongoing debate on marginalized suffering. Annemarie Pabel is an independent researcher with a PhD in English lit- erature. Her research interests include trauma studies and women’s writing. Routledge Studies in Comparative Literature This series is our home for cutting-edge, upper-level scholarly studies and edited collections. Taking a comparative approach to literary studies, this series visits the relationship of literature and language alongside a variety of interdisciplinary and transnational topics. Titles are characterized by dynamic interventions into established subjects and innovative studies on emerging topics. Mystic Modernity Tagore and Yeats Ashim Dutta New Directions in Flânerie Global Perspectives for the Twenty-First Century Edited by Kelly Comfort and Marylaura Papalas Reclaiming Karbala Nation, Islam and Literature of the Bengal Muslims (1860s–1940s) Epsita Halder The Myth and Identity of the Romantic Artist in European Literature A Self-Constructed Fantasy Elena Anastasaki Transformative Fictions World Literature and Personal Change Daniel Just Women Writing Trauma in the Global South A Study of Aminatta Forna, Isabel Allende and Anuradha Roy Annemarie Pabel For more information about this series, please visit: www.routledge.com/ Routledge-Studies-in-Comparative-Literature/book-series/RSCOL Women Writing Trauma in the Global South A Study of Aminatta Forna, Isabel Allende and Anuradha Roy Annemarie Pabel First published 2023 by Routledge 605 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10158 and by Routledge 4 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon, OX14 4RN Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business © 2023 Annemarie Pabel The right of Annemarie Pabel to be identified as author of this work has been asserted in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechani- cal, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. Trademark notice: Product or corporate names may be trade- marks or registered trademarks, and are used only for identifica- tion and explanation without intent to infringe. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data A catalog record for this title has been requested ISBN: 978-1-032-21117-6 (hbk) ISBN: 978-1-032-32469-2 (pbk) ISBN: 978-1-003-26682-2 (ebk) DOI: 10.4324/9781003266822 Typeset in Sabon by SPi Technologies India Pvt Ltd (Straive) Contents 1 Introduction: Concepts and Contexts of Psychological Wounding 1 Canonical Cultural Trauma Theory and Emerging Critical Perspectives 4 The Case for a Reconceptualization of Trauma 7 Wound Narratives from the Global South 9 2 Aminatta Forna 13 Fictional Representations of Traumatic Disintegration in The Memory of Love 15 Prolonged and Insidious Trauma in The Devil that Danced on the Water 22 Narrative Critique of the PTSD Category in Happiness 32 Narrative Negotiations of a Context-specific Trauma Model 39 Complicated Witnessing in The Devil that Danced on the Water 44 Unempathic Gazing and Professional Witnessing in Happiness 51 Post-traumatic Resilience in Happiness 56 3 Isabel Allende 69 Writing during Trauma in Paula 71 Fictional Representations of Childhood Trauma in Portrait in Sepia 76 Inscriptions of Trauma in Landscape: Exile and Mental Dislocation 83 vi Contents Resurfacing of Wounds in Storytelling 89 Epistolary Narration in Articulating Bereavement 94 Magical Realist Elements in Representing the Unspeakable 99 Photography as a Testimonial Practice in Portrait in Sepia 104 Narrating ‘Belonging’ in My Invented Country 110 4 Anuradha Roy 115 Fictional Representations of Prolonged Childhood Violence 116 Topographic and Architectural Manifestations of Traumatic Unhomeliness in An Atlas of Impossible Longing 123 Familial Disintegration and Unhomeliness 130 Self-Awareness and Transgression of Forms in Articulating Trauma 136 Epistolary Elements and Narrative Authority 143 5 Conclusion: Connecting Trauma Narratives in the Global South 152 Inscriptions of Complex Wounds 152 Towards Conceptual Inclusivity 158 Bibliography 163 Index 170 1 Introduction Concepts and Contexts of Psychological Wounding Experiences of physiological and psychological wounding are rampant in our world which is facing multiple humanitarian, political and ecological crises. Often such crises become irreversibly enmeshed in one another and create prolonged, multilayered forms of traumatic suffering. Amidst these global crises, some contexts and populations are affected dispro- portionately by such wounding phenomena. In the global South, where most of the world’s population lives, the risk of experiencing trauma is compounded by factors, such as war, poverty, displacement and disen- franchisement. However, the majority of health and mental health research is conducted in the global North with the result that such fields may not adequately grasp and represent the realities, contexts and needs of the victims and survivors in the global South. Women, and especially women of colour, have been disproportionally exposed to multiple forms of prolonged and systemic violence, yet the available literature does not fully represent these realities and the underlying layers of disempower- ment. Thus, the ways in which women’s voices have been silenced have carried far-reaching implications on how trauma is recorded and faced as well as on the survivors’ agency. Women Writing Trauma in the Global South examines modalities of psychological trauma in selected works by three women writers from the global South: the Scottish Sierra Leonean writer Aminatta Forna, the Chilean American author Isabel Allende and Anuradha Roy from India. It seeks to examine manifestations of complex and prolonged experiences of trauma occurring in literature and the ways in which literary forms facilitate such representations. In particular, it focuses on multilayered and interrelated forms of trauma which exceed conventional conceptual- izations of trauma1 such as war, exile, extensive childhood sexual abuse, maternal bereavement and familial disintegration. For the argument of this book, three texts from each author’s body of literary work have been selected: Forna’s memoir The Devil that Danced on the Water: A Daughter’s Quest (2003) and her novels The Memory of Love (2010) and Happiness (2010); Allende’s memoirs Paula (1994), My Invented Country (2004) and Portrait in Sepia (2000); and Roy’s novels An Atlas DOI: 10.4324/9781003266822-1 2 Introduction of Impossible Longing (2008), Sleeping on Jupiter (2015) and All the Lives We Never Lived (2018). This focus on women writers from differ- ent contexts in the global South is motivated by an imbalance in critical attention and the validation extreme forms of suffering receive globally and across gender lines. Through exploring literary representations of fundamentally disruptive experiences and concomitant psychological suffering, this book argues that each narrative reveals problematic aspects of the established category of trauma. The cultural canon of trauma the- ory, which is largely constructed around the horrors of the Holocaust and, more recently, 9/11, has come under critique for its Westocentric focus and the marginalization of suffering in non-Western contexts. The centrality of the Holocaust is paralleled by a literary paradigm of Holocaust memoirs and survivor narratives in which male-centred accounts predominated for a long time. Simultaneously, the West’s com- plicity in the creation of chronic suffering globally and the popularization of the term trauma are hardly deniable phenomena. The constellation of writers and texts in this book transgresses many interrelated boundaries of geographical and cultural contexts, language and genre in grappling with horror and suffering. Concomitantly, it unveils intersecting histories of multilayered violence generated by war, political unrest, racist discourse, as well as by exilic and cultural displace- ment across contexts. Within these transgressions of boundaries, the nar- ratives offer focal points for a critical engagement with contextual and conceptual limitations of the traditional cultural trauma category. In the writing of all three authors, forms of political conflict play a central role and affect the creation of trauma to varying degrees. Both Forna’s mem- oir The Devil that Danced on the Water: A Daughter’s Quest (2003) and her novel The Memory of Love (2010) thematize the political unrest leading up to the Sierra Leonean Civil War between 1991 and 2002 as well as its devastating aftermath. Allende’s memoirs Paula (1994) and My Invented Country (2004) draw on the military dictatorship in Chile between 1973 and 1990, while two of Roy’s texts address the violence shaping the time period around the partition of India in 1947. Set in politically and culturally uprooted Bengal during 1907 and 1956, her novel An Atlas of Impossible Longing (2008) follows three generations of an Indian family and is set in the years prior to, during and after the partition. Roy’s novel All the Lives We Never Lived (2018) draws on the tension prior to the partition more subtly. Although these context-specific conflicts vary distinctly in nature and effect, the different authors’ writing of these conflicts shares a central concern with how violent political con- ditions infiltrate ordinary everyday life and become enmeshed with other forms of violence. Specifically, painful familial disintegration and unhomeliness, as a result of either political violence, racism and/or mater- nal bereavement and abandonment, features in the writing of all three authors. Both Forna’s and Allende’s lived realities and, subsequently, their Introduction 3 writing have been impacted by political exile and the experiences of dis- placement and ‘unbelonging’ these conditions produce. Their memoirs, in particular, are concerned with experiences of exile. Similarly, Forna and Allende have both traversed from the southern to the northern hemi- sphere, leaving their native Sierra Leone for Scotland and Chile for the United States, respectively. In Forna’s novel The Memory of Love and Happiness and in Allende’s My Invented Country, the authors’ intimate familiarity with two different geocultural contexts reflects in their critical stance on theoretical and clinical conceptualizations of trauma. Much like exilic and contextual transgressions, the multiplicity of genres and narrative modes is central to each author’s navigation of proximity to and perspectives on traumatic experience and corrupted memory. Resurfacing memories and traumatic reliving are encountered by the characters of Forna’s The Memory of Love and Allende’s Portrait in Sepia. At the same time, both Allende’s Portrait in Sepia and Roy’s All the Lives We Never Lived are fictional memoirs in which the protagonists destabilize clear boundaries of genre and narrative authority in overcom- ing their traumatic experiences through modes of life writing. In light of these (con)textual transgressions, Women Writing Trauma in the Global South proposes that a conjunctional exploration of these authors’ writing can broaden global intersections of extreme historic vio- lence, literary forms and conceptual limitations. In order to trace such borderlines and their potentially subversive qualities, the exploration of each body of narratives progresses from an analysis of represented wounds to aspects of representability through a focus on form and their possible implications. More specifically, it delineates textually inscribed traumatic wounds and the forms of violence behind these intrusive and distorting phenomena. Thereafter, it examines the role of literary forms in representing such experiences and asks what reparative practices differ- ent articulatory modes may engender. The global constellation of texts, authors and theoretical perspectives constitutes both the original contri- bution and the central challenge of this book: to sustain critical aware- ness of context- and culture-specific meaning and boundaries in a comparative exploration of shared traumatic suffering and its global (in) validation. To conceive of the disintegrative and isolating subjectivity that characterizes trauma experientially across varying sets of circum- stances, Ruth Klüger’s notion of timescape offers a conceptual point of departure for this intervention. Her 2001 autobiography Still Alive: A Holocaust Girlhood Remembered, in which the Holocaust survivor grap- ples with the immense difficulty of fully conveying a particular traumatic past transcontextually, is oftentimes considered a formative part of the otherwise male-dominated literary Holocaust canon and of Erinnerungskultur (culture of remembering).2 She uses the term times- cape to “indicate the nature of a place in time, that is, at a certain time, neither before nor after” (2001:67). The relevance of Klüger’s concept

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