In an exploration of how contemporary fiction narratives
represent trauma--that response to events so overwhelmingly intense
that normal responses become impaired--Laurie Vickroy engages a
wealth of the twentieth century's most striking literature. Toni
Morrison's Beloved and Jazz, Marguerite Duras's The Lover, Dorothy
Allison's Bastard out of Carolina, Jamaica Kincaid's The
Autobiography of My Mother, and Larry Heinemann's Paco's Story,
among others, are the source of Vickroy's study investigating the
complex relationship between sociocultural influences and intimate
personal relations portrayed in trauma fiction and how those
portrayals direct this difficult material to readers.
Vickroy's study is unique in its use of trauma, postcolonial,
and object relations theories to illuminate the cultural aspects of
traumatic experience that shape relationships, identity formation,
and the possibilities for symbolization. Vickroy argues that
contemporary trauma narratives are indeed personalized responses to
this century's emerging awareness of the catastrophic effects on
the individual psyche of wars, poverty, colonization, and domestic
abuse. She examines these texts as postcolonial attempts to
rearticulate the lives and voices of marginalized people, to reject
Western conceptions of the autonomous subject, and to recognize the
complex negotiations of multicultural social relations.
Trauma is a compelling and evocative topic in the contemporary
world and as reflected in its literature. In unraveling trauma's
effects, the texts studied in Trauma and Survival in Contemporary
Fiction reveal the intricacies of power and the relationship
between society's demands and the individual's psychological
well-being.
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