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Of resistant mothers and women turned goddesses: Marlene Nourbese Philip's "Salmon courage"

  • Autores: Isabel Alonso Breto
  • Localización: Proceedings from the 31st AEDEAN Conference: [electronic resource] / María Jesús Lorenzo Modia (ed. lit.), José Miguel Alonso Giráldez (ed. lit.), Mónica Amenedo Costa (ed. lit.), María J. Cabarcos-Traseira (ed. lit.), Begoña Lasa Álvarez (ed. lit.), 2008, ISBN 978-84-9749-278-2, págs. 587-598
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Enlaces
  • Resumen
    • "Salmon Courage" (1983) is Marlene Nourbese Philip's second collection of poems, published three years after "Thorns", her first book, and six before the outstanding "She tries her tongue, her silence softly breaks". "Salmon Courage" follows the thematic and formal lines opened up in "Thorns" yet showing an evolution in form and content, pointing to the directions which will be fully developed later on in her best-known, fully mature poetic work.

      In "Salmon Courage" her principal focus is on women, both per se and as mothers. Women are presented as strong and venerable, to the point that they are accorded godly qualities. It manages to repair several wrongs: that of the cultural dispossession meant by the Middle Passage for Afrosporic peoples (particularly women) and that of being forced to live in white- and male-dominated societies which condemn women to live in a state of perpetual oppression.


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