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Typ záznamu:
kapitola v odborné knize (C)
Domácí pracoviště:
Katedra anglistiky a amerikanistiky (25400)
Název:
The Story of Two Houses: An Ecofeminist Reading of ToniMorrison’s A Mercy and Home
Citace
Changizi, P. The Story of Two Houses: An Ecofeminist Reading of ToniMorrison’s A Mercy and Home.
In:
Petr Kopecký, Jan Beneš.
Environmental Justice in Ethnic American Literature.
1. vyd. Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group, 2024. s. 153-177. ISBN 978-1-66691-900-4.
Podnázev
Rok vydání:
2024
Obor:
Forma vydání:
Tištená verze
Kód ISBN:
978-1-66691-900-4
Název knihy v originálním jazyce:
Environmental Justice in Ethnic American Literature
Název edice a číslo svazku:
neuvedeno
Místo vydání:
Lanham
Název nakladatele:
Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group
Označení vydání
(číslo vydání):
1:
Vydáno:
v zahraničí
Autor zdrojového dokumentu:
Petr Kopecký, Jan Beneš
Počet stran:
25
Počet stran knihy:
210
Strana od:
153
Strana do:
177
Počet výtisků knihy:
EID:
Klíčová slova anglicky:
reproductive justice, environmental justice, Toni Morrison
Popis v původním jazyce:
Parisa Changizi’s “The Story of Two Houses: An Ecofeminist Reading of Toni Morrison’s A Mercy and Home,” focuses on the intersection of Environmental Justice and Reproductive Justice Movements. A salient yet slightly obscure facet of the juncture of the two movements is how marginalized communities and Third World women are targeted by racist, nativist, xenophobic, and even supposedly pro-environmental discourses and policies in the name of population control. This study of Morrison’s novels focuses on this facet, exploring how America ultimately came to treat Black bodies as vessels of future polluting agents. A Mercy (2008) is an exceptional narrative in Morrison’s oeuvre in which she burrows her way back to almost pre-racial and preracist colonial America. Linking colonialism, slavery, (emerging) racism, and the environment, Morrison shows that racist venom can stealthily spill out into the natural world, presaging how marginalized groups will be left to suffer the brunt of environmental degradation in the future of this land. Although the ensuing full-scale (environmental) ramifications of the Europeancolonialization of North America and the institution of slavery are notexplored in this story, A Mercy builds a bridge back to where it all began, making itself, in effect, a prelude to every other story in Morrison’s body of work, Home (2012) being a case in point. The exploitative gender-based racist practices that were taking form in colonial America persisted long enough to violate the polluting Black female bodies in the 1950s, which Morrison described as a period of racial violence in American history from McCarthy hearings to eugenic abuse of Black women and the syphilis trials on Black men.
Popis v anglickém jazyce:
Parisa Changizi’s “The Story of Two Houses: An Ecofeminist Reading of Toni Morrison’s A Mercy and Home,” focuses on the intersection of Environmental Justice and Reproductive Justice Movements. A salient yet slightly obscure facet of the juncture of the two movements is how marginalized communities and Third World women are targeted by racist, nativist, xenophobic, and even supposedly pro-environmental discourses and policies in the name of population control. This study of Morrison’s novels focuses on this facet, exploring how America ultimately came to treat Black bodies as vessels of future polluting agents. A Mercy (2008) is an exceptional narrative in Morrison’s oeuvre in which she burrows her way back to almost pre-racial and preracist colonial America. Linking colonialism, slavery, (emerging) racism, and the environment, Morrison shows that racist venom can stealthily spill out into the natural world, presaging how marginalized groups will be left to suffer the brunt of environmental degradation in the future of this land. Although the ensuing full-scale (environmental) ramifications of the Europeancolonialization of North America and the institution of slavery are notexplored in this story, A Mercy builds a bridge back to where it all began, making itself, in effect, a prelude to every other story in Morrison’s body of work, Home (2012) being a case in point. The exploitative gender-based racist practices that were taking form in colonial America persisted long enough to violate the polluting Black female bodies in the 1950s, which Morrison described as a period of racial violence in American history from McCarthy hearings to eugenic abuse of Black women and the syphilis trials on Black men.
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