The present article analyses Zadie Smith’s short story “The Embassy of Cambodia” (2013) as a narrative that contributes to the decolonization of trauma studies. In the introduction I will lay out briefly the state of affairs in trauma studies and the relevance of trauma in Smith’s work as represented in White Teeth and NW. For the purpose of this paper, I will provide a close reading of “The Embassy of Cambodia” and I will rely on Michael Rothberg’s theory of multidirectional memory to illustrate how the history of genocide in Cambodia and the history of the protagonist of the story, which is effectively one of slavery, conflate in Smith’s text to bring to the fore silenced histories in a more ethical manner that seeks to put an end to comp...
Intergenerational trauma can be understood as the transmission of historical trauma and its adverse ...
This article argues the significance of literature in bearing witness to trauma. It engages the theo...
Cathy Caruth and Shoshana Felman’s pioneering work in trauma theory provided innovative critical fra...
The present article analyses Zadie Smith’s short story “The Embassy of Cambodia” (2013) as a narrati...
Zadie Smith’s second novel, The Autograph Man (2002), was severely reviewed by several critics who e...
Dominant theorizations of cultural trauma often appeal to the twinned notions of “recognition” and “...
Decolonizing trauma theory has been a major project in postcolonial literary scholarship ever since ...
Calls to decolonise trauma studies have drawn attention to the need to extend our reading of testimo...
Dr Sonya Andermahr and Dr Larissa Allwork co-convened this one-day symposium sponsored by The School...
This dissertation examines literary representations of trauma and survival in relation to the Holoca...
Cathy Caruth and Shoshana Felman’s pioneering work in trauma theory provided innovative critical fra...
Calls to decolonise trauma studies have drawn attention to the need to extend our reading of testimo...
Decolonizing trauma theory has been a major project in postcolonial literary scholarship ever since ...
In an attempt to decolonize Trauma Studies, a dominant mental health discourse, and to expand our un...
Intergenerational trauma can be understood as the transmission of historical trauma and its adverse ...
This article argues the significance of literature in bearing witness to trauma. It engages the theo...
Cathy Caruth and Shoshana Felman’s pioneering work in trauma theory provided innovative critical fra...
The present article analyses Zadie Smith’s short story “The Embassy of Cambodia” (2013) as a narrati...
Zadie Smith’s second novel, The Autograph Man (2002), was severely reviewed by several critics who e...
Dominant theorizations of cultural trauma often appeal to the twinned notions of “recognition” and “...
Decolonizing trauma theory has been a major project in postcolonial literary scholarship ever since ...
Calls to decolonise trauma studies have drawn attention to the need to extend our reading of testimo...
Dr Sonya Andermahr and Dr Larissa Allwork co-convened this one-day symposium sponsored by The School...
This dissertation examines literary representations of trauma and survival in relation to the Holoca...
Cathy Caruth and Shoshana Felman’s pioneering work in trauma theory provided innovative critical fra...
Calls to decolonise trauma studies have drawn attention to the need to extend our reading of testimo...
Decolonizing trauma theory has been a major project in postcolonial literary scholarship ever since ...
In an attempt to decolonize Trauma Studies, a dominant mental health discourse, and to expand our un...
Intergenerational trauma can be understood as the transmission of historical trauma and its adverse ...
This article argues the significance of literature in bearing witness to trauma. It engages the theo...
Cathy Caruth and Shoshana Felman’s pioneering work in trauma theory provided innovative critical fra...