Abstract

the traumatic memory of their ancestors. The novel navigates sites of trauma, memory, and blues music while resisting the bourgeoisie-capitalist relationships that permeated not only white society but also African American communities. Jones’s novel presents the plight of an African American woman, Ursa, caught between the memory of her enslaved foremothers and her life in an emancipated world. The physical and spiritual exploitation of African American women who bear witness to the history of slavery in Corregidora materializes black women’s individuality. This article is framed by trauma studies as well as the Marxists’ concepts of commodification, accumulation, and production. Ursa, one of the Corregidora women, represents a commodified individual in her own community. However, in Ursa, Jones writes a blacks woman’s voice that undermines, interrupts, and destabilizes the patriarchal dynamic of America. Corregidora is a novel that forms from a black women’s perspective that refuses the enslavement of African American women’s bodies, hi/stories, and voices (both during and post-slavery).

Highlights

  • Normative body and beauty images created from the history of slavery and patriarchal discourses imposed an othered gaze onto the bodies of African American women

  • The new discourse Jones constructs demands a reevaluation of the long-term consequences of slavery on black female identity

  • The process of commodification of Ursa’s ancestors by slave owner, Simon Corregidora, functions as use and exchange in the economic system of slavery. Ursa carries this genealogy of trauma and commodification in her body, her narratives, and in her voice

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Summary

Introduction

Normative body and beauty images created from the history of slavery and patriarchal discourses imposed an othered gaze onto the bodies of African American women. In her work, Jones structures a critique on the commodification of black women’s bodies and identities from white capitalist systems and the inherited trauma of racism. The trauma of Ursa’s foremothers, Corregidora women, stems from the commodification of their bodies and lives; their enslavement functions within a profitgenerating system.

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