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Listening to melancholia: Alice Walker's Meridian
Abstract:ABSTRACT

Alice Walker's second novel, Meridian (1976), explores both the ways in which racist societies initiate and exacerbate melancholia and how this psychological dynamic can and must be overcome. The novel posits not a simple ‘cure’ but rather a process of questioning and learning from the past and one's painful attachments to it. In this way it negotiates scholarly concerns about psychoanalytic theory, as manifest particularly in literary criticism and critical race studies. Far from normalizing a form of identity focused on the past, this experimental novel depicts psychological transformation as an effort that requires the willingness to untangle the relationships involved in one's present, one's past and broader systems of social injustice.
Keywords:African American fiction  Alice Walker  American literature  contemporary African American women's literature  melancholia  Meridian  psychoanalysis  race  racism  time in narrative  womanist fiction
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