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Introduction: The Daughter's Return | 3 | |
Pt. I | African-American Women Writers | |
1 | Toni Morrison's Beloved: History, "Rememory," and a "Clamor for a Kiss" | 19 |
2 | Adventures of the Magic Black Daughter: History and "Renaissance" in Contemporary African-American Women's Fictions | 41 |
Mothering the Renaissance | 42 | |
Return of the Magic Black Daughter | 60 | |
3 | Further Adventures of the Magic Black Daughter | 77 |
One Dark Body | 77 | |
Variations on Childbirth | 95 | |
Coda | 103 | |
Pt. II | Caribbean Women Writers | |
4 | Caribbean Women's Literature and the Mother of History | 107 |
Recovering the Mother-Island | 107 | |
The Caribbean Daughter's Return | 117 | |
Jamaica Kincaid and the Maternal Void of History | 127 | |
5 | Burning Down the House: Daughterly Revision in Jean Rhys's Wide Sargasso Sea | 133 |
6 | Decolonizing Jamaica's Daughter: Learning History in the Novels of Michelle Cliff | 151 |
The Novel as Abeng | 151 | |
Becoming History: No Telephone to Heaven | 163 | |
7 | Crossing Water: Maryse Conde's I, Tituba and the Horizontal Plot | 183 |
Epilogue: History, Horizontality, and the Postcolonial Hester Prynne: On Conde, Mukherjee, and Morrison | 203 | |
Notes | 213 | |
Works Cited | 241 | |
Index | 259 |
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The Daughter's Return: African-American and Caribbean Women's Fictions of History, Caroline Rody's The Daughter's Return offers a close analysis of an emerging genre in African-American and Caribbean fiction: the novels of black women writers who have returned to their ancestral pasts. In novels like Toni Morrison's Beloved
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The Daughter's Return: African-American and Caribbean Women's Fictions of History, Caroline Rody's The Daughter's Return offers a close analysis of an emerging genre in African-American and Caribbean fiction: the novels of black women writers who have returned to their ancestral pasts. In novels like Toni Morrison's Beloved
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