Enslaved women’s traumas and resistance to slavery: A study in four selected novels.
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University of Cape Coast
Abstract
The thesis examines the trauma that enslaved women encounter at
various stages of their capture and enslavement, the ways in which they resist
the brutalities of slavery, and how these are represented in the four literary
texts under study. The study is subjected through the lens of the
psychoanalytic theory of trauma and Slaves resistance to enslavement. The
study also employs a qualitative research by doing a close reading of the texts
and enhancing the analysis with further information from texts books, journals
and articles. Character is the tool used to answer the research questions.
Critical analyses of the texts reveal that trauma is not only physical but
psychological as well. The findings further suggest that trauma could be
Transgenerational. Some female characters did not experience first-hand
traumas from the Transatlantic Slave Trade but they are subjected to
Transgenerational traumas from their enslaved parents and ancestors. In
addition, another important finding is that enslaved women devise several
forms of resistance to enslavement such as running away, committing suicide,
infanticide, and using negotiation. The study concludes by recommending
Africans to resist all forms of enslavement
Description
vii,156p;,ill
