Violence and body in Toni Morrison’s Beloved (1987) and Ahlem Mostaghanemis’ Memory in the Flesh(1993)

dc.contributor.authorBouheraoua, Sabrina
dc.date.accessioned2022-02-27T10:05:19Z
dc.date.available2022-02-27T10:05:19Z
dc.date.issued2018
dc.description30cm ; 55p.en
dc.description.abstractThis research is a comparative study that explores the notion of violence and body in Toni Morrison’s “Beloved” (1987), and Ahlem Mosteghanemi’s “Memory in the flesh” (1993). It aims at revising the representation of the body and the portrayal of violence against it in both of them. The study tries to compare and contrast the way; degree and background of traumatic violation against the body in both narratives manifest. The study adoptes two theories, whose choice was made according to the similarity of the historical backgrounds between each of the two novels and the corresponding theory, in terms of policies and the interrelation of violence and body in a meantime. In our analyses we resorted to in one hand to Michel Foucault’s theory on body violence in his book “ discipline and punish” (1975) due to the relevance that it reveals concerning racism toward the black community, in addition to slavery as a main issue that shapes that historical period. On the other hand, we resorted to the conceptional analyses of Hannah Arendt her theory “on violence” (1987) that studies terror of the late twentieth century and its impact on our colonized communities. This research is divided into three chapters. The first chapter resorts with the relevance of the historical roots of violence in America and Algeria as geographical location for each novel in its own. The second one shows how do memory and past’s extent contribute in violence against the body. The third chapter revises the notions of exile and escape. Highlighting the way do both novelists make their portrayal of violence in the different presented communities.en
dc.identifier.citationgeneral and comparative literatureen
dc.identifier.urihttps://dspace.ummto.dz/handle/ummto/16580
dc.language.isoenen
dc.publisherUniversité Mouloud Mammeri Tizi Ouzouen
dc.subjectThis research is a comparative study that explores the notion of violence and body in Toni Morrison’s “Beloved” (1987), and Ahlem Mosteghanemi’s “Memory in the flesh” (1993). It aims at revising the representation of the body and the portrayal of violence against it in both of them. The study tries to compare and contrast the way; degree and background of traumatic violation against the body in both narratives manifest. The study adoptes two theories, whose choice was made according to the similarity of the historical backgrounds between each of the two novels and the corresponding theory, in terms of policies and the interrelation of violence and body in a meantime. In our analyses we resorted to in one hand to Michel Foucault’s theory on body violence in his book “ discipline and punish” (1975) due to the relevance that it reveals concerning racism toward the black community, in addition to slavery as a main issue that shapes that historical period. On the other hand, we resorted to the conceptional analyses of Hannah Arendt her theory “on violence” (1987) that studies terror of the late twentieth century and its impact on our colonized communities. This research is divided into three chapters. The first chapter resorts with the relevance of the historical roots of violence in America and Algeria as geographical location for each novel in its own. The second one shows how do memory and past’s extent contribute in violence against the body. The third chapter revises the notions of exile and escape. Highlighting the way do both novelists make their portrayal of violence in the different presented communities.en
dc.titleViolence and body in Toni Morrison’s Beloved (1987) and Ahlem Mostaghanemis’ Memory in the Flesh(1993)en
dc.typeThesisen

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