Within her novels," Kindred" and "Lilith’s Brood", Octavia Butler uses the idea of ethno-maternity to explore the ways in which matrilineal relationships between black women can act as way to break free from white supremacist heteropatriarchal structures and allow black women full subjectivity. Between these two texts, Butler explores the ways in which ethno-maternity and a reliance on maternal memory both helps the black female body work through the trauma of remembering slavery, but also helps black women deconstruct the institutionalized gendered hierarchies of colonialism.M.A.Includes bibliographical referencesby Amanda Dibando Awanj
textThe grim fantasy genre was once a product of Butler's resistant strategies against women's erasu...
In her book In Search of Our Mothers\u27 Gardens Alice Walker addresses black American women\u27s la...
For over 200 years, Black women authors in the United States have cautioned that erasing the perspec...
Octavia Butler was a prominent speculative fiction author and also one of the first female African A...
Through Butler’s Kindred, numerous tensions are raised around the notions of accessibility, disabili...
This thesis offers a critical analysis of matrilineal legacies and traumatic memories in twentieth-c...
Changing Bodies in the Fiction of Octavia Butler: Slaves, Aliens, and Vampires is a timely text that...
Slaveryrsquos legacy haunts present-day America, and its enduring trauma is reflected in the writing...
Dana, the Black female protagonist in Octavia Butler’s novel Kindred (1979), finds herself literally...
In this paper, I will examine both Butler’s Dawn and Kindred under the circumstances of slavery, rac...
This research studies the portrait of otherness against black people in Antebellum America, as seen ...
Octavia E. Butler’s Kindred (1979) employs time travel, one of speculative fiction’s traditional pr...
In this thesis Octavia Butler’s Kindred is analysed with the use of Judith Butler’s theory of perfor...
Octavia E. Butler's Kindred (2003) and Valerie Martin's Property (2003) revisit slavery as a site of...
The present study adopts a critical posthuman perspective to investigate how Octavia Butler’s Kindre...
textThe grim fantasy genre was once a product of Butler's resistant strategies against women's erasu...
In her book In Search of Our Mothers\u27 Gardens Alice Walker addresses black American women\u27s la...
For over 200 years, Black women authors in the United States have cautioned that erasing the perspec...
Octavia Butler was a prominent speculative fiction author and also one of the first female African A...
Through Butler’s Kindred, numerous tensions are raised around the notions of accessibility, disabili...
This thesis offers a critical analysis of matrilineal legacies and traumatic memories in twentieth-c...
Changing Bodies in the Fiction of Octavia Butler: Slaves, Aliens, and Vampires is a timely text that...
Slaveryrsquos legacy haunts present-day America, and its enduring trauma is reflected in the writing...
Dana, the Black female protagonist in Octavia Butler’s novel Kindred (1979), finds herself literally...
In this paper, I will examine both Butler’s Dawn and Kindred under the circumstances of slavery, rac...
This research studies the portrait of otherness against black people in Antebellum America, as seen ...
Octavia E. Butler’s Kindred (1979) employs time travel, one of speculative fiction’s traditional pr...
In this thesis Octavia Butler’s Kindred is analysed with the use of Judith Butler’s theory of perfor...
Octavia E. Butler's Kindred (2003) and Valerie Martin's Property (2003) revisit slavery as a site of...
The present study adopts a critical posthuman perspective to investigate how Octavia Butler’s Kindre...
textThe grim fantasy genre was once a product of Butler's resistant strategies against women's erasu...
In her book In Search of Our Mothers\u27 Gardens Alice Walker addresses black American women\u27s la...
For over 200 years, Black women authors in the United States have cautioned that erasing the perspec...