Sewlall, H.Abodunrin, O.Oduwobi, Oluyomi Abayoni2017-08-042017-08-042016-05Oduwobi, O.A. 2016. Representations of the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade in selected contemporary narratives. . . http://hdl.handle.net/11602/746http://hdl.handle.net/11602/746PhD (English)Department of EnglishThe trans-Atlantic slave trade refers to the forced transportation of African people as slaves trom Africa to the Americas across the Atlantic Ocean between the fifteenth and nineteenth centuries. Therefore, using the theoretica! frameworks of postcolonialism, postcolonial feminism and postmodern historiographic metafiction, this thesis evaluates the theoretica! and practical importance of reconstructing a historica! past as well as counter-hegemonie proclivities in contemporary literary narratives. lt sets an analytic focus on the extensive representations of the trans-Atlantic slave trade in selected contemporary literary narratives such as: Charles Johnson's Middle Passage (1990); David Pesci's Amistad (1997); Fred D'Aguiar's Feeding the Ghosts (1997); Caryl Phillips's The Atlantic Sound (2000); Manu Herbstein's Ama: A Story of the Atlantic Stave Trade (2000); Lawrence Hill's The Book of Negroes (2007); Prince Justice's Tutuoba: Salem's Black Shango Stave Queen (2007); and Saidiya Hartman's Lose Your Mother: A Joumey Along the Atlantic Stave Route (2007). This study evinces the diverse approaches the selected writers of African descent employ to interrogate and destabilise the official history of the trans-Atlantic slave trade in an attempt to reconceptualise it. As a result, this study examines how the selected writers deviate trom the normative form of writing slave narratives to make the trans-Atlantic slave trade and its engendered discourses on racism, identity, gender, polities, socio-economie realities and the African diaspora relevant to the twenty-first century reader. An examination of the selected narratives for this thesis contributes to the knowledge on literary scholarship and exposes aspects of the trans-Atlantic slave trade that have been previously unexplored. The conscious efforts of the writers to interrogate the canonical slave narratives and subvert the hegemonie history through their imaginative techniques direct attention to the contemporary discourses of appraising the interdisciplinary links between literature and ether subject areas such as history, law, as well as cultural and diasporic studies.1 online resource (vii, 204 leaves)enUniversity of VendaAfrican diasporaUCTDContemporary literary narrativesTrans Atlantic slave trade306.362096Slave trade -- AfricaSlavery -- United StatesAntislavery -- AfricaAfrica -- HistoryRepresentations of the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade in selected contemporary narrativesThesisOduwobi OA. Representations of the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade in selected contemporary narratives. []. , 2016 [cited yyyy month dd]. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/11602/746Oduwobi, O. A. (2016). <i>Representations of the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade in selected contemporary narratives</i>. (). . Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/11602/746Oduwobi, Oluyomi Abayoni. <i>"Representations of the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade in selected contemporary narratives."</i> ., , 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/11602/746TY - Thesis AU - Oduwobi, Oluyomi Abayoni AB - See the attached abstract below DA - 2016-05 DB - ResearchSpace DP - Univen KW - African diaspora KW - Contemporary literary narratives KW - Trans Atlantic slave trade LK - https://univendspace.univen.ac.za PY - 2016 T1 - Representations of the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade in selected contemporary narratives TI - Representations of the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade in selected contemporary narratives UR - http://hdl.handle.net/11602/746 ER -