HORÁKOVÁ, Martina. "Resilience and Healing in the Non-fiction of Indigenous Public Intellectuals". In International conference Narratives of Resilience and Healing, University of Salamanca, October 9-10, 2017, Salamanca. 2017.
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Základní údaje
Originální název "Resilience and Healing in the Non-fiction of Indigenous Public Intellectuals"
Autoři HORÁKOVÁ, Martina (203 Česká republika, garant, domácí).
Vydání International conference Narratives of Resilience and Healing, University of Salamanca, October 9-10, 2017, Salamanca, 2017.
Další údaje
Originální jazyk angličtina
Typ výsledku Prezentace na konferencích
Obor 60206 Specific literatures
Stát vydavatele Španělsko
Utajení není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
WWW URL
Kód RIV RIV/00216224:14210/17:00099041
Organizační jednotka Filozofická fakulta
Klíčová slova anglicky Indigenous nonfiction; resilience; healing; Thomson Highway; Henry Kreisel Lecture
Štítky rivok
Příznaky Mezinárodní význam, Recenzováno
Změnil Změnil: Mgr. Igor Hlaváč, učo 342491. Změněno: 6. 3. 2018 10:11.
Anotace
The presentation will focus on exploring how the notions of resilience and healing are conveyed through the genre of personal non-fiction by contemporary Indigenous writers who apart from writing fiction often speak/write as public intellectuals, addressing issues pertinent to their respective Indigenous communities and to themselves as Indigenous artists in a globalized world. While the genre of non-fiction may have been slightly neglected in the critical scholarship, it has, as Robert Warrior claims in People and the Word: Reading Native Nonfiction, always played a central role in constituting Indigenous intellectual milieu. It stems, however, from a specific tradition—one that is informed by Indigenous cultural practices of storytelling, lived experience, communal identity as well as the transgenerational trauma of colonization. Indigenous non-fiction has also been used as a vehicle to theorize philosophical concepts, critical knowledges and research methodologies, although often through personalized stories and extended family and ancestors’ experience rather than abstract theories. Resilience of the First Nations cultures is in these narratives articulated through the principle of duality: on the one hand they tell stories of grief, loss and displacement but, on the other hand, of survival, continuance and sustainability. I will use examples from earlier personal non-fiction by Indigenous women such as Lee Maracle and Beth Brant, who in their non-fiction present arguments for restoring healthy, functioning and strong female Indigeneity in order to decolonize Indigenous communities, while also drawing attention to the ways in which other established First Nations writers present Indigenous worldviews, namely in the Henry Kreisel lecture series which recently featured Indigenous writers Joseph Boyden (2007), Eden Robinson (2010), and, most recently, Thomson Highway (2014). I will argue that these writers and storytellers speak as public intellectuals, using personal non-fiction and autobiographical writing to address various audiences and to testify to the resilience of cultures that survived genocide and dispossession.
Návaznosti
MUNI/A/1065/2016, interní kód MUNázev: Profilace výzkumných zaměření v anglofonní lingvistické a literární vědě II (Akronym: VZALL2)
Investor: Masarykova univerzita, Profilace výzkumných zaměření v anglofonní lingvistické a literární vědě II, DO R. 2020_Kategorie A - Specifický výzkum - Studentské výzkumné projekty
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