Matria Redux

About The Book

In <i>Matria Redux: Caribbean Women Novelize the Past</i> author Tegan Zimmerman contends that there is a need for reading Caribbean women's texts relationally. This comprehensive study argues that the writer's turn to maternal histories constitutes the definitive feature of this transcultural and transnational genre. Through an array of Caribbean women's historical novels published roughly between 1980 and 2010 this book formulates the theory of matria--an imagined maternal space and time--as a postcolonial-psychoanalytic feminist framework for reading fictions of maternal history written by and about Caribbean women. <p/> Tracing the development of the historical novel in four periods of the Caribbean past--slavery colonialism revolution and decolonization--this study argues that a pan-Caribbean generation of women writers of varying discursive racial(ized) realities has depicted similar matria constructs and maternal motifs. A politicized concept matria functions in the historical novel as a counternarrative to traditional historical and literary discourses. <p/> Through close readings of the mother/daughter plots in contemporary Caribbean women's historical fiction such as Andrea Levy's<i> The Long Song</i> Edwidge Danticat's <i>The Farming of Bones</i> Paule Marshall's <i>Praisesong for the Widow</i> and Marie-Elena John's<i> Unburnable</i> <i>Matria Redux</i> considers the concept of matria an important vehicle for postcolonial-psychoanalytic feminist literary resistance and political intervention. Matria as a psychoanalytic postcolonial strategy therefore envisions by returning to history alternative feminist fictions futures and Caribbeans.
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