Feminist/queer/diasporic temporality in Bernardine Evaristo's Girl, Woman, Other (2019)

被引:3
|
作者
Sanchez-Palencia, Carolina [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Seville, Dept Literatura Inglesa & Norteamer, C Palos Frontera S-N, Seville 41004, Spain
关键词
Queer Temporality; Bernardine Evaristo; Black British Diaspora; Black Feminism; TIME;
D O I
10.1177/13505068211048466
中图分类号
C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ;
摘要
Claiming that individuals and communities get their choices, rhythms and practices biopolitically choreographed by temporal mechanisms that dictate which human experiences are included or excluded, Elizabeth Freeman states that those `whose activities do not show up on the official time line, whose own time lines do not synchronize with it, are variously and often simultaneously black, female, queer' (2005). The narrative subject of Bernardine Evaristo's Girl, Woman, Other (2019) is black, female and (mostly) queer in her design of a polyphonic text featuring twelve black women moving through the world in different decades and occupying a temporal dimension that deviates from the linear and teleological modes. I draw on Edelman (2004); Freeman (2010) and Ahmed (2010, 2017) to analyse Evaristo's novel as a text informed by feminist queer temporality and thus explore these characters' resistance to chrononormative assumptions like 'the straight time of domesticated gender, capital accumulation, and national coherence' (Ramberg, 2016). In this light, I address her cast of 'time abjects'-lesbians, transgender women, feminist killjoys and menopausal females-as characterized 'chronotopically' as their racialized and gendered subjectivities coalesce temporally and spatially seeing their pasts and futures interact in a typically transpositional, queer and diasporic continuum. By invoking Freeman's notion of 'erotohistoriography' (2010) as a distinctive mode of queer time that not only recognizes non-linear chronopolitics, but decidedly prioritizes bodies and pleasures in self-representation, I contend that Evaristo depicts bodies as likewise performing this encounter between past and present in hybrid, carnal and trans-temporal terms. I conclude that in her joining temporality and corporeality, memory and desire, she suggests alternative ways of representing contemporary black British womanhood
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页码:316 / 330
页数:15
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