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My SCE project will look at how colonial violence spans generations through hereditary trauma in three texts, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s novel Purple Hibiscus, Mai Der Vang’s book of poems Afterland, and lê thi diem thúy’s novel The Gangster We are All Looking For. The motif of family in these texts is used to explain transgenerational trauma responses to past and current psychological effects of colonization and war. I will be looking at critical perspectives of postcolonial theory, family trauma, and literary criticism in order to show my audience the importance of heritage and transgenerational narratives in postcolonial literature.

Abubakar, Sadiya. “Traumatic Experiences of Nigerian Women: An Archetypal Representation in Adichie’s Purple Hibiscus.” IRA-International Journal of Management & Social Sciences (ISSN 2455-2267) [Online], 4.3 (2016): 602-611. Web. 24 Oct. 2019

Abubakar’s article, “Traumatic Experiences of Nigerian Women: An Archetypal Representation in Adichie’s Purple Hibiscus”, provides an insight into how literature talks about trauma, and how trauma shapes generations. Abubakar talks about women’s oppression and trauma due to sexual assault, abuse, and poverty in Nigeria. She relates the patriarchal oppression of women to Purple Hibiscus, which she calls “an epitome of Nigerian women’s difficulties and their traumatic experiences” (Abubakar 603). Abubakar’s article discusses trauma theory in relation to literature and delves into the psychology of several of Adichie’s characters. Abubakar’s argument is that multiple traumas, from domestic violence to the trauma of oppression, affect and shape the Adichie’s characters and their familial relationships. These character relationships reflect to the trauma postcolonial Nigerians face. Abubakar’s main project is to show through literary analysis the necessity of trauma centers in Nigeria, and that literature is “unveiling such issues of trauma and letting it to penetratingly reach out to the world through narration” (610). This text is important to my SCE because it provides an overview of trauma and how it affects Nigerian people, and specifically Purple Hibiscus.  Abubakar’s article focuses specifically on women, but I believe that this is not a limitation because of women’s role in affecting the culture of both families and generations. My argument that trauma is hereditary, and that Purple Hibiscus shows an example of this psychological phenomenon, is supported by Abubakar’s examples of women’s trauma in postcolonial Nigeria and her analysis of Adichie’s writing.  I will use Abubakar’s article to support my argument that the characters in Purple Hibiscus inherit the postcolonial trauma of their parents and ancestors through the way this trauma shapes their family dynamic.

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My topic is currently how specific reinterpretations of the Cinderella tale are affected by the changing gender roles of the surrounding time period.

Dundes, Alan. Cinderella, a Folklore Casebook. Garland Pub., 1982.

The source I will be looking at is Cinderella, A Folklore Casebook by Alan Dundes.  This book contains both a small collection of early Cinderella tales, such as Perrault’s and the Grimm Brothers’, as well as small essays analyzing different aspects of the tale and its interpretations.  I find this source useful for its translation of both Perrault’s and the Grimm Brothers’ versions, as they were written in French and German, respectively, and the first section of this book gives me easy access to the translated versions and annotates where they came from.  This will give me original texts to work with and compare to other versions.  I had been planning on using some of the essays in the next section of the book, but the one I was looking at specifically turned out to use psychoanalysis theory rather than cultural, feminist, or gender theory as I had hoped.  I plan on looking at a few more of the essays included, but I don’t hold much hope of finding something useful, not least of all because this book was published in the 1980’s and uses essays from a few decades before.  What I find more useful is the bibliography of this book.  It will hopefully lead me to more helpful sources.  I plan on using both the bibliographies of the essays that are included as well as the selected bibliography at the back that is intended for further research.