If… Bernardine Evaristo’s (Gendered) Reconstructions of Black European History
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Ingrid von Rosenberg
Abstract
Bernardine Evaristo is one of the young black British writers, who entered the literary scene in the mid-nineties. By now she has published five novels. Already in her first work Lara, a novel in verse, she was concerned with history, but her interest was limited to her family saga, i.e. the stories of both her British and Nigerian ancestors. After this strongly autobiographical text Evaristo turned her interest to the wider topic of black history in Britain and Europe. She wrote revisionist historical novels, in which the resilience and creative power of blacks are celebrated. Her approach falls in with a recent general tendency in black British culture, most marked in art, to break away from the image of blacks as victims and instead to highlight their resistance and creativity. In The Emperor’s Babe (also in verse), Soul Tourists (in prose mixed with verse) and Blonde Roots (pure prose) Evaristo experimented with three different approaches to history, yet all are marked by exuberant fantasy, empathy, humour and a bold mixture of language registers. The article investigates and compares her treatment of black history in all three texts and finally discusses the question whether and, if so, in what ways her approaches seem gendered
© 2014 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co.
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Titelei
- Inhalt
- Editorial
- Terrors of Territory: Mary Rowlandson, Charles Brockden Brown, Shyamalan’s The Village, and the Haunting of the American Frontier
- Stranger on a Train: William Blake and Jim Jarmusch’s Dead Man – Media and Violence, Poetry and Politics
- Re-Reading George Pal’s The Time Machine: Decolonization, Integration, and the Cold War
- Ethical Magic: Traumatic Magic Realism in Toni Morrison’s Beloved
- If… Bernardine Evaristo’s (Gendered) Reconstructions of Black European History
- Buchbesprechungen
- Bucheingänge
- Die Autoren dieses Heftes
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Titelei
- Inhalt
- Editorial
- Terrors of Territory: Mary Rowlandson, Charles Brockden Brown, Shyamalan’s The Village, and the Haunting of the American Frontier
- Stranger on a Train: William Blake and Jim Jarmusch’s Dead Man – Media and Violence, Poetry and Politics
- Re-Reading George Pal’s The Time Machine: Decolonization, Integration, and the Cold War
- Ethical Magic: Traumatic Magic Realism in Toni Morrison’s Beloved
- If… Bernardine Evaristo’s (Gendered) Reconstructions of Black European History
- Buchbesprechungen
- Bucheingänge
- Die Autoren dieses Heftes