Zadie Smith and Postcolonial Trauma Zadie Smith and Postcolonial Trauma
Routledge Studies in Contemporary Literature

Zadie Smith and Postcolonial Trauma

Decolonising Trauma, Decolonising Selves

    • 45,99 €
    • 45,99 €

Publisher Description

This monograph analyses Zadie Smith’s White Teeth, On Beauty, NW, The Embassy of Cambodia, and Swing Time as trauma fictions that reveal the social, cultural, historical, and political facets of trauma. Starting with Smith’s humorous critique of psychoanalysis and her definition of original trauma, this volume explores Smith’s challenge of Western theories of trauma and coping, and how her narratives expose the insidiousness of (post)colonial suffering and unbelonging. This book then explores transgenerational trauma, the tensions between remembering and forgetting, multidirectional memory, and the possibilities of the ambiguities and contradictions of the postcolonial and diasporic characters Smith depicts. This analysis discloses Smith’s effort to ethically redefine trauma theory from a postcolonial and decolonial standpoint, reiterates the need to acknowledge and work through colonial histories and postcolonial forms of oppression, and critically reflects on our roles as witnesses of suffering in global times.

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
2021
13 July
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
176
Pages
PUBLISHER
Taylor & Francis
SIZE
1
MB

Other Books in This Series

Memory and Nation-Building Memory and Nation-Building
2021
Of Love and Loss Of Love and Loss
2022
The London Object The London Object
2021
Collage in Twenty-First-Century Literature in English Collage in Twenty-First-Century Literature in English
2019
Poetry and the Question of Modernity Poetry and the Question of Modernity
2020
Contemporary Capitalism, Crisis, and the Politics of Fiction Contemporary Capitalism, Crisis, and the Politics of Fiction
2019