African Women Under Fire: Literary Discourses in War and Conflict
African writers and literary critics must account for the changing political terrain and how these contribute to creating new sources of conflicts and aggression toward women. This book brings insight and scholarly breadth to the growing research on women, war, and conflict in Africa. The aftermath of wars and conflicts initiates new forms of violence and related gender challenges. The contributors establish compelling evidence for the significance of gender in the analyses of contemporary warfare and conflict. Articulating war's consequences for women and children remains a major challenge for critics, policy makers, and human rights organizations. There is a need for deeper understanding of the new sources of violence and male aggression on women, the gendered challenges of reintegration in the aftermath, and the future consequences of gendered violence for the African continent. This book will be useful to scholars, researchers, instructors, students of literature in the humanities, women's studies, liberal studies, African studies, etc. at both undergraduate and graduate levels. It also offers interdisciplinary utility for readers interested in literary representations of women's experience in war and conflict.
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African Women Under Fire: Literary Discourses in War and Conflict
African writers and literary critics must account for the changing political terrain and how these contribute to creating new sources of conflicts and aggression toward women. This book brings insight and scholarly breadth to the growing research on women, war, and conflict in Africa. The aftermath of wars and conflicts initiates new forms of violence and related gender challenges. The contributors establish compelling evidence for the significance of gender in the analyses of contemporary warfare and conflict. Articulating war's consequences for women and children remains a major challenge for critics, policy makers, and human rights organizations. There is a need for deeper understanding of the new sources of violence and male aggression on women, the gendered challenges of reintegration in the aftermath, and the future consequences of gendered violence for the African continent. This book will be useful to scholars, researchers, instructors, students of literature in the humanities, women's studies, liberal studies, African studies, etc. at both undergraduate and graduate levels. It also offers interdisciplinary utility for readers interested in literary representations of women's experience in war and conflict.
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Overview

African writers and literary critics must account for the changing political terrain and how these contribute to creating new sources of conflicts and aggression toward women. This book brings insight and scholarly breadth to the growing research on women, war, and conflict in Africa. The aftermath of wars and conflicts initiates new forms of violence and related gender challenges. The contributors establish compelling evidence for the significance of gender in the analyses of contemporary warfare and conflict. Articulating war's consequences for women and children remains a major challenge for critics, policy makers, and human rights organizations. There is a need for deeper understanding of the new sources of violence and male aggression on women, the gendered challenges of reintegration in the aftermath, and the future consequences of gendered violence for the African continent. This book will be useful to scholars, researchers, instructors, students of literature in the humanities, women's studies, liberal studies, African studies, etc. at both undergraduate and graduate levels. It also offers interdisciplinary utility for readers interested in literary representations of women's experience in war and conflict.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781498529204
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 02/11/2020
Pages: 216
Sales rank: 787,931
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 8.87(h) x 0.63(d)

About the Author

Pauline Ada Uwakweh is associate professor of literature at North Carolina A &T State University.

Table of Contents

Foreword
Acknowledgments
Part I: Female, Victim, Agent: African Women in War and Conflict
Introduction: Exploring African Women and the War Experience—A Critical Update, by Pauline Ada Uwakweh
Chapter 1: At the Center, Taking Charge: Disruptive Discourse and Female Agency in Buchi Emecheta’s Destination Biafra and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s Half of a Yellow Sun, by Jessie Sagawa
Chapter 2: An Attempt at Inclusion: Reading the War Theme in Black Zimbabwean Women Texts, by Tendai Mangena
Chapter 3: The Female Body as Locus for National Trauma in the Fiction of Yvonne Vera, by Melissa R. Root
Chapter 4: Fanta Nacro’s Night of Truth: the Journey to the End of the Night, by P. Julie Papaioannou
Chapter 5: Resilient Strategies and Reconstruction in Leonora Miano’s Literary Writing, by Paul N. Touré
Part II: Trauma, Reintegration, Healing: Transcending the Aftermath of Wars and Conflicts
Chapter 6: Memoir versus Fiction: Narrating Trauma in Girl Soldier: A Story of Hope for Northern Uganda's Children and Thirty Girls, by Pauline Ada Uwakweh
Chapter 7: “I Just Wanted To Forget It All. But It Was Impossible:” Umutesi and the Politics of Testimony in Surviving the Slaughter: The Ordeal of a Rwandan Refugee in Zaire, by Emilie Diouf
Chapter 8: Victims’ Narratives versus Perpetrators Testimonies: Understanding Violence against Women in Armed Conflicts in Africa, by Moussa Issifou
Chapter 9: Testimony as Text: “Performative Vulnerability” and the Limits of Legalistic Approaches to Refugee Protection, by Nanjala Nyabola
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