Madness in Black Women's Diasporic Fictions
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Table of Contents

Chapter 1. Introduction: Women, Writing, Madness: Reframing Diaspora Aesthetics – Caroline A. Brown.- Chapter 2. Resisting Displacement in Bernardine Evaristo’s The Emperor’s Babe – Nancy Caronia.- Chapter 3. Madness and Translation of the Bones-as-text in Marlene NourbeSe Philip’s Experimental Zong! – Richard Douglass-Chin.- Chapter 4. Embodied Haunting: Aesthetics and the Archive in Toni Morrison's Beloved – Victoria Papa.- Chapter 5. Fissured Memory and Mad Tongues:  The Aesthetics of Marronnage in Haitian Women’s Fiction – Johanna X. K. Garvey.- Chapter 6. Dark Swoops: Trauma and Madness in Half of a Yellow Sun – Seretha D. Williams.- Chapter 7. “We Know People By Their Stories”: Madness, Babies, and Dolls in Edwidge Danticat’s Krik? Krak! – Raquel D. Kennon.- Chapter 8. Sharazade’s Sisters and the Harem: Reclaiming the Forbidden as a Site of Resistance in Toni Morrison’s Paradise – Majda R. Atieh.- Chapter 9. Magic, Madness and the Ruses of the Trickster: Healing Rituals and Alternative Spiritualities in Gloria Naylor’s Mama Day, Erna Brodber’s Jane and Louisa Will Soon Come Home, and Nalo Hopkinson’s Brown Girl in the Ring – Caroline A. Brown.- Chapter 10. “Recordless Company”: Precarious Postmemory in Helen Oyeyemi’s The Icarus Girl – E. Kim Stone.- Chapter 11: Conclusion: Moving Beyond Psychic Ruptures – Johanna X. K. Garvey.

About the Author

Caroline A. Brown is Associate Professor of English Literature at the University of Montreal, Canada. She is author of The Black Female Body in American Literature and Art: Performing Identity (2012). Her articles have appeared in African American Review, Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa, and the Middle East, National Women’s Studies Association Journal, and several other journals and edited collections.

Johanna X. K. Garvey is Associate Professor of English at Fairfield University, USA, where she was founding Co-Director of the Women’s Studies Program and the Program in Black Studies: Africa and the Diaspora. She has published on Ann Petry, Michelle Cliff, Merle Collins, Paule Marshall, Dionne Brand, Shani Mootoo, Patricia Powell, Maryse Condé, and others, in Callaloo, The Journal of Commonwealth and Postcolonial Literature, Textual Practice, Anthurium, and elsewhere. She is completing a book manuscript on Caribbean women writing diaspora.

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