Abstract

Starting from Hirsch and Smith’s concept of a feminist counterhistory and referencing the theoretical framework of cultural trauma, this paper undertakes a (re)reading of Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God as construction of gendered countermemory. Such an interpretation would enable a recognition of the political function of the novel as an identity matrix of African-American womanhood. Expanding upon the classical, post-Lacanian approach to trauma studies and its post-colonial reconfigurations, I use a poststructuralist framing of collective trauma, and the Saussurian concept of signification, to highlight the struggle for self-determination of an oppressed community as it is signified-upon by its oppressors through violently imposed discourse. I further question the complicity between conventional forms of narration and the hegemony of an external signifier, and I trace this patterned mechanism of aggression within the linguistic and diegetic fabric of the novel, in order to expose Hurston’s literary methodology of collective memorialization and the way it challenges canonical representations of trauma.

Highlights

  • The opening paragraphs of Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God contain a richly lyrical description of a gendered construction of reality, demarcating the female ability of self-signifying through an active formulation of counter-memory

  • It can be argued that these incipient paragraphs deliver a heuristic imperative by establishing “a model of reading, of understanding an oral or written text” (Wolff 29), and enabling the reader to actively and vividly perceive the novel in its SIGNIFYING THE SELF

  • The rehabilitation of Zora Neale Hurston’s legacy as both littérateur and cultural theorist, after the rediscovery of her work by Alice Walker in 1975 – in itself part of a wider effort to establish a genealogy of the literary voice of African-American womanhood – enabled a critical reassessment of Their Eyes Were Watching God

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Summary

Introduction

The opening paragraphs of Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God contain a richly lyrical description of a gendered construction of reality, demarcating the female ability of self-signifying through an active formulation of counter-memory.

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