Autochthonomies : transnationalism, testimony, and transmission in the African Diaspora / Myriam J.A. Chancy.
Material type:![Text](/opac-tmpl/lib/famfamfam/BK.png)
- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9780252051906
- 0252051904
- Transnationalism, testimony, and transmission in the African Diaspora
- African diaspora -- History
- Black people -- History
- African diaspora in literature
- African diaspora in art
- Africa -- Civilization
- Africains -- Pays étrangers -- Histoire
- Africains -- Pays étrangers, dans la littérature
- SOCIAL SCIENCE -- General
- African diaspora
- African diaspora in art
- African diaspora in literature
- Black people
- Civilization
- Africa
- 909/.0496 23
- DT16.5 .C47 2020
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Materials specified | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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OPJGU Sonepat- Campus | E-Books EBSCO | Available |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
(Re)Presenting Racial Permeability, (Dis)Ability, and Racial (Dis)Affiliations -- Autochthonomous Transfigurations of Race and Gender in Twenty-First-Century Transnational Genocide Testimonial Narratives -- Subjectivity in Motion : Caribbean Women's (Dis)Articulations of Being -- Autochthonomous Ambiguities : Travel, Memoir, and Transnational African Diasporic Subjects in (Post)colonial Contexts.
"In this book of textual and cultural studies, Myriam J.A. Chancy focuses on the tropes of transnationalism, testimony and transmission within African diasporic texts. Not a work simply concerned with "racial rehabilitation" or "inclusion" within the dominant discourses of North America and Western Europe, it intends to serve as an intervention in race, Caribbean, African diasporic, and cultural studies by providing a radically new model for a culturally imbedded reading practice of contemporary works by African and African diasporic artists. Its purpose is to reveal the contributions to ontology that such artists deploy. In developing this approach, Chancy revisits the concept of "interpretive communities" from a distinctively African diasporic point of view. She uses concepts derived from contemporary philosophical approaches to subjectivity that revise-and mostly discard-Hegelian principles in order to assert less Eurocentric approaches. Building from these, she develops her neologism autochthonomy (aw-tok-ton-nuh-mee), which describes a practice of subjectivity and agency employed by African diasporic artists. Those artists chosen for this study bring together the experiences, movements, and knowledge of populations of African descent both on the continent and dispersed throughout Europe and the Americans in order to emphasize transnational interactions between African cultural producers and sites."-- Provided by publisher
Online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on March 20, 2020).
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