Reimagining the African heritage in short stories
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.12957/matraga.2019.42396Keywords:
Reimagined African heritage, Afro-Brazilian short stories, Mãe Beata de Yemonjá.Abstract
This article aims to present a critical study of selected short stories by Mãe Beata de Yemonjá (1931-2017), author of Histórias que a minha avó contava (2004) and Caroço de Dendê (2008). In her work, the writer engages in literary representations of symbolic elements derived from African cultures and reconfigured in Brazil, understood as a diasporic territory for black subjects. The tropes of this reimagined and recreated Africa unveil the cultural agency of a storyteller who deals with culture as a strategy of survival in contexts marked by a history of racism and intolerance towards African-derived traditions.
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