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Liberating the Oppressed Body in Roxane Gay's Hunger

Filaj, A.: Liberating the Oppressed Body in Roxane Gay's Hunger.
In: Memory, Trauma, and the Construction of the Self. Ed.: by Péter Gaál-Szabó, Szilárd Kmeczkó, Andrea Csillag, and Ottilia Veres, Debrecen Reformed Theological University : Partium Kiadó, Debrecen ; Nagyvárad, 51-60, 2021, (Cultures, Contexts, Identities, ISSN 2631-1674 ; 3.) ISBN: 9786155853456
title:
Liberating the Oppressed Body in Roxane Gay's Hunger
authors:
  • Filaj, Anxhela
published:
2021
type:
book chapter
genre:
book chapter
language:
English
HAC:
Humanities, Literary and Cultural Studies
subjects:
intersectionality, trauma narrativity, sexual abuse, gender and race
abstract:
In this chapter, Anxhela Filaj examines Hunger, the memoir by American author Roxane Gay, through the lens of trauma narrativity and the psychosocial consequences of embodied self-perception. The analysis foregrounds Gay's articulation of early-life sexual violence and its enduring impact on her corporeal self-image, investigating how profound trauma reconfigures narrative identity. Drawing on the theoretical framework of intersectionality, Filaj situates Gay's account within a matrix of overlapping structural disadvantages, including race, gender, body size, and cultural heritage, to explore how these intersecting axes shape the narrative possibilities available to survivors of trauma. The memoir is thus read not only as a personal testimony but also as a critical intervention in dominant discourses surrounding embodiment, trauma, and marginalized identities.
DEENK University of Debrecen
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