Suspect Survival: Matrophobia in Postmemory Generational Writing

IF 0.1 0 LITERARY THEORY & CRITICISM
Elizabeth Kella
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract Family and kinship carry special significance to Holocaust survivors and their descendants. In autobiographies and family memoirs, writers of what Marianne Hirsch terms the postmemory generation employ different narrative strategies for coming to terms with the ways in which the Holocaust has marked their identities and family ties. This article focuses on women’s writing of the postmemory generation, examining three works in English by daughters of survivors in the UK, the US, and Canada, written during the 1990s. It investigates the narrative strategies used by Anne Karpf, Helen Fremont, and Lisa Appignanesi to represent maternal sexual agency and vulnerability in a survival context. It suggests that these representations are strongly influenced by matrophobia and matrophilia, defined as the conflicting dread of becoming and desire to be one’s mother, which are themselves strongly conditioned by Holocaust history, particularly the gendered history of vulnerability among women in open hiding during the war1.
怀疑生存:后记忆世代写作中的恐母症
家庭和亲属关系对大屠杀幸存者及其后代具有特殊意义。在自传和家庭回忆录中,被玛丽安·赫希(Marianne Hirsch)称为“后记忆一代”的作家采用了不同的叙事策略,来接受大屠杀给他们的身份和家庭关系留下的印记。本文关注后记忆一代女性的写作,考察了英国、美国和加拿大幸存者的女儿在20世纪90年代创作的三部英文作品。它调查了安妮·卡尔夫、海伦·弗里蒙特和丽莎·阿皮格纳西在生存背景下表现母亲性能动性和脆弱性的叙事策略。研究表明,这些表现受到恐母症和亲母症的强烈影响,被定义为对成为母亲的相互矛盾的恐惧和成为母亲的愿望,这本身受到大屠杀历史的强烈影响,特别是战争期间公开躲藏的妇女的脆弱性的性别历史。
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来源期刊
American, British and Canadian Studies
American, British and Canadian Studies Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
CiteScore
0.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
10 weeks
期刊介绍: Founded in 1999, American, British and Canadian Studies, the journal of the Academic Anglophone Society of Romania, is currently published by Lucian Blaga University of Sibiu. Re-launched in refashioned, biannual format, American, British and Canadian Studies is an international, peer-reviewed journal that sets out to explore disciplinary developments in Anglophone Studies in the changing environment forged by the intersections of culture, technology and electronic information. Our primary goal is to bring together in productive dialogue scholars conducting advanced research in the theoretical humanities. As well as offering innovative approaches to influential crosscurrents in contemporary thinking, the journal seeks to contribute fresh angles to the academic subject of English and promote shape-changing research across conventional boundaries. By virtue of its dynamic and varied profile and of the intercultural dialogue that it caters for, ABC Studies aims to fill a gap in the Romanian academic arena, and function as the first publication to approach Anglophone studies in a multi-disciplinary perspective. Within the proposed range of diversity, our major scope is to provide close examinations and lucid analyses of the role and future of the academic institutions at the cutting edge of high-tech. With this end in view, we especially invite contributions in the fields of Comparative Literary and Cultural Studies, Postcolonial Theory, Area Studies, Cultural Anthropology, Language and Linguistics, Multimedia and Digital Arts, Translation Studies and related subjects. With its wide subject range, American, British and Canadian Studies aims to become one of the academic community’s premium scholarly resources.
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