Subversive Ghosts: Epistemic Injustice, Invisibility, and Silencing in American Women's Fiction

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URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10900/157159
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:21-dspace-1571592
http://dx.doi.org/10.15496/publikation-98491
Dokumentart: PhDThesis
Date: 2024-09-05
Language: English
Faculty: 5 Philosophische Fakultät
Department: Anglistik, Amerikanistik
Advisor: Butter, Michael (Prof. Dr.)
Day of Oral Examination: 2024-05-14
DDC Classifikation: 420 - English and Old English
800 - Literature and rhetoric
810 - American literature in English
Other Keywords:
Women's Literature
Gothic Literature
Epistemic Violence
Epistemic Injustice
Ghost Story
Silencing
Invisibility
Literary Criticism
License: http://tobias-lib.uni-tuebingen.de/doku/lic_ohne_pod.php?la=de http://tobias-lib.uni-tuebingen.de/doku/lic_ohne_pod.php?la=en
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Abstract:

This dissertation examines how American women writers from the mid-nineteenth century until today use the literary trope of the ghost to criticise epistemic violence and epistemic injustice against women and People of Color. More precisely, the project puts nineteenth-century ghost stories by white, middle-class women into dialogue with contemporary ghost novels written by women of Color. Amongst others, the dissertation examines stories such as Elizabeth Stuart Phelps's "The Day of My Death" (1868), Harriet Beecher Stowe's "The Ghost in the Cap'n Brown House" (1872), Charlotte Perkins Gilman's "The Yellow Wall-Paper" (1892), or Edith Wharton's "Kerfol" (1916) as well as novels such as Nora Okja Keller's Comfort Woman (1997), Toni Morrison's Love (2003), Louise Erdrich's The Sentence (2021), or Silvia Moreno-Garcia's Mexican Gothic (2022). The dissertation argues that nineteenth-century ghost stories criticise the invisibility of the female experience and the silencing of women's voices in patriarchal society. It further argues that while contemporary ghost novels by women of Color are still very much concerned with issues of silencing and invisibility, they increasingly focus on the legacies of colonialism and slavery and racial injustice. More specifically, contemporary ghost novels criticise epistemic violence against People of Color in white, patriarchal society, the silencing of women of Color, white ignorance as well as white historiography.

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