This essay investigates the autobiographical voice as a means of claiming or disavowing racial identities. With reference to the work of Levi, Bauman, Cohen, Rose and Rich, it argues that the 'autobiographical act' enables the 'disassembling' of the racialised self, offering possibilities for challenging homogenous and reified categories such as 'white' and 'black'. It takes examples from sociological and anthropological theorists to highlight the significance of situation, place and gender, and aligns this argument with feminist work on gender and subjectivity
This dissertation examines contemporary black transgender women’s life writing in the U.S. and uses ...
AbstractThis thesis seeks to explore the intersectionality of Race, Whiteness and Gender Studies thr...
The paper pinpoints the revelation, evolution and development of the Black Women under the impact of...
This article considers how women's life writing has offered a situated mode of resistance to dominan...
This thesis is a comparative assessment of the historical memories of African-Caribbean and Jewish c...
In recent years, there has been an increasing interest in the role of collective memory in ethno-nat...
The primary object of study in this dissertation is memory within autobiographical writing among wri...
Women\u27s autobiographical writings are in a unique position to influence positively political move...
Claiming; Identities are powerful, empowering and affirming. They can also be constructions of power...
In the recent years, the autobiographical project has attained much critical attention as it has the...
This thesis explores six post-1990s black and Asian British women novelists and the ways in which th...
This thesis features a range of texts that exemplify my practice. They include experimental prose, p...
This article uses autobiographical material to explore how 'race' has operated as structuring princi...
This article is based on a research work in progress which approaches the relationship between writt...
A relational autobiography, The Color of Water (1996) documents, interprets and rethinks issues of i...
This dissertation examines contemporary black transgender women’s life writing in the U.S. and uses ...
AbstractThis thesis seeks to explore the intersectionality of Race, Whiteness and Gender Studies thr...
The paper pinpoints the revelation, evolution and development of the Black Women under the impact of...
This article considers how women's life writing has offered a situated mode of resistance to dominan...
This thesis is a comparative assessment of the historical memories of African-Caribbean and Jewish c...
In recent years, there has been an increasing interest in the role of collective memory in ethno-nat...
The primary object of study in this dissertation is memory within autobiographical writing among wri...
Women\u27s autobiographical writings are in a unique position to influence positively political move...
Claiming; Identities are powerful, empowering and affirming. They can also be constructions of power...
In the recent years, the autobiographical project has attained much critical attention as it has the...
This thesis explores six post-1990s black and Asian British women novelists and the ways in which th...
This thesis features a range of texts that exemplify my practice. They include experimental prose, p...
This article uses autobiographical material to explore how 'race' has operated as structuring princi...
This article is based on a research work in progress which approaches the relationship between writt...
A relational autobiography, The Color of Water (1996) documents, interprets and rethinks issues of i...
This dissertation examines contemporary black transgender women’s life writing in the U.S. and uses ...
AbstractThis thesis seeks to explore the intersectionality of Race, Whiteness and Gender Studies thr...
The paper pinpoints the revelation, evolution and development of the Black Women under the impact of...