Other language title :
روان زخمِ ميان - نسلي مهاجرت: بازنويسي سوبژكتيويته مهاجرت در سايه توهم سرزمين مادري/ديگري
Title of article :
The Transgenerational Trauma of Displacement: Rewriting Diasporic Subjectivities in the Shadow of the Phantom of the (M)other land
Author/Authors :
Bahmanpour, Bahareh Department of Foreign Languages - North-Tehran Branch - Islamic Azad University, Tehran
Abstract :
This research is based on the premise that assiduous attention to the transgenerational traumatic aspect of diasporic displacements not only gives voice to the often covert narratives of loss and pain encrypted in the diasporic literature, but it also sheds light on the process of the negotiation of subjectivities by both the first- and the secondgeneration diasporic subjects. As a critical inquiry into the literary representations of
diasporic subjectivities via a predominantly psychoanalytically-inspired approach,
the present paper’s reading of diasporic short fiction, thus, sits restlessly on the nexus
of both diaspora studies and the psychoanalytic studies of trauma. Through a close
textual analysis of two samples of short fiction (authored by Chitra Banerjee
Divakaruni and Tania James), the present study, thus, seeks to put forward its
intergenerational conception of diasporic subjectivities in the light of the theory of
transgenerational haunting. To this end, it explores the ways in which different
generations of diasporic subjects are haunted by the phantom of a (M)otherland
whose uncanny shadow is woven into the confounding reality of diasporic life. This
phantom constantly exposes the diasporic self to a psychic space of empathy whose
emergence is facilitated by the presence of an external other (most commonly,
someone belonging to another generation) who through cathartic interactions with
the diasporic self endows her/him with a fair chance to (re-)negotiate her/his
subjectivities and to be placed on the threshold of a belated mourning for a hithertorepressed oft-internalized sense of otherness, if not an oft-occluded shame of
unbelongingness.
Keywords :
Diaspora , Trauma of Displacement , Transgenerational Trauma , Transgenerational Phantom , Diasporic Subjectivity
Journal title :
Critical Literary Studies