Genealogies as an interpretive paradigm for engaging African women writers’ historical consciousness

M. N. Were
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Abstract Historical discourses in women’s writing are inherently revisionist. My paper proposes genealogical narrations as an interpretive paradigm for thinking through women narrators’ engagement with history in Grace Akinyi Ogot’s Days of My Life (2012) and Ellen Johnson Sirleaf’s This Child Will Be Great (2009). Drawing on autobiographical theories by Jane Marcus and Elleke Boehmer, and on orature, the paper examines how women autobiographers narrate genealogies which contest dominant autobiographical and historical discourses and practices that silence women and their agency, or distort them in history. These genealogical forms draw parallels with oral genres to produce a hybrid form that capitalizes on the agency African women enjoyed in matriarchal cultures before colonialism. The emergent power dynamic enables the writers to deploy symbolic grammar and resignify the private act of auto-biographical narration as a historical process and women as producers of history. These genealogies (in writing) advanced by the women writers in autobiography and the oral genres they intertextually interact with form the basis for writing alternative histories, and serve as a demonstration of their historical consciousness.
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《家谱》是介入非洲女作家历史意识的一种解释范式
女性写作中的历史话语具有内在的修正主义色彩。我的论文提出,在格蕾丝·阿金尼·奥格特的《我的日子》(2012)和埃伦·约翰逊·瑟利夫的《这个孩子会很伟大》(2009)中,家谱叙事作为一种解释范式,可以通过女性叙述者与历史的接触来思考。借鉴Jane Marcus和Elleke Boehmer的自传体理论以及orature,本文研究了女性自传体作者如何叙述家谱,这些家谱与主流的自传和历史话语和实践相抗衡,这些话语和实践使女性及其代理沉默,或在历史上扭曲她们。这些系谱形式与口头类型相似,产生了一种混合形式,利用了殖民主义之前母系氏族文化中非洲妇女享有的代理权。涌现的权力动态使作家能够运用符号语法,将自传体叙事的私人行为重新定义为一个历史过程,将女性重新定义为历史的生产者。这些由女性作家在自传中提出的(书面的)谱系及其相互作用的口头体例构成了书写另类历史的基础,并展示了她们的历史意识。
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