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dc.contributor.advisorSimal, Begoña
dc.contributor.authorLópez Pombo, Diego
dc.contributor.otherUniversidade da Coruña. Facultade de Filoloxíaes_ES
dc.date.accessioned2022-02-15T09:18:18Z
dc.date.available2022-02-15T09:18:18Z
dc.date.issued2021
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2183/29789
dc.description.abstract[Abstract] The social, political and racial tensions that have been questioning the actual social equity in the United States of America lately, epitomized by the Black Lives Matter movement, seem to require an interpretation that may be non-spectacular. To understand the current situation, probably one of the best manners would be to analyze an artistic manifestation which may be aligned with the objectives of social equality and whichalso covers the root of such inequityin the United States: black slavery. Ta-Nehisi Coates’ The Water Dancer, a neoslave narrative published in 2019, focuseson the situation of African Americans in the Southern United States, set in the period prior to the 19th-century American Civil War. The book, apparently little researched yet by literary critics, offers some possible interesting threads to explore, among them the role of slaves as disposable commodified propertyaswell as the ways in which they are relatedto their environment and subjected to what Rob Nixondefines as slow violence. From his ecocritical perspective of environmental justice, the intertwining of class, postcolonialism and the environment has consequencesbothfor the society and for nature. One of the objectives of this work is to argue that the traditional, long-termed and obscured naturalization of this slow violence exerted on the African American slaves may explain the hierarchical discriminatory distinction based on race that some sociologists assert continues to existin the United States. With this premise in mind, the methodologyof thisessaywill consist in textual close readings hand in hand with Nixon’s aforementioned theoretical background and somecontextual, extra-literary pieces related to the representations in the novel.es_ES
dc.language.isoenges_ES
dc.rightsOs titulares dos dereitos de propiedade intelectual autorizan a visualización do contido deste traballo a través de Internet, así como a súa reproducción, gravación en soporte informático ou impresión para o seu uso privado e/ou con fins de estudo e de investigación. En nengún caso se permite o uso lucrativo deste documento. Estos dereitos afectan tanto ó resumo do traballo como o seu contido Los titulares de los derechos de propiedad intelectual autorizan la visualización del contenido de este trabajo a través de Internet, así como su repoducción, grabación en soporte informático o impresión para su uso privado o con fines de investigación. En ningún caso se permite el uso lucrativo de este documento. Estos derechos afectan tanto al resumen del trabajo como a su contenidoes_ES
dc.subjectAfrican American slaveryes_ES
dc.subjectDisposabilityes_ES
dc.subjectEcocriticismes_ES
dc.subjectEnvironmentalism of the slaveses_ES
dc.subjectMagical realismes_ES
dc.subjectNeoslave narrativeses_ES
dc.subjectPostcolonialismes_ES
dc.subjectNixon, Robes_ES
dc.subjectSlow violencees_ES
dc.subjectThe Water Danceres_ES
dc.subjectCoates, Ta-Nehisies_ES
dc.title“Property, and a Valuable Property”: A Study of Disposability, Slow Violence and the Environmentalism of the Slaves in Ta-Nehisi Coates’ The Water Danceres_ES
dc.typeinfo:eu-repo/semantics/masterThesises_ES
dc.rights.accessinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccesses_ES
dc.description.traballosTraballo fin de mestrado (UDC.FIL). Estudos ingleses avanzados e as súas aplicacións. Curso 2020/2021es_ES


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