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- The Southern Literary Journal
- The University of North Carolina Press
- Article
- Trauma Narrative, Memorialization, and Mourning in Phyllis Alesia Perry's Stigmata Volume 40, Number 2, Spring 2008, pp. 284-304
To further meet your research needs, the complete digital issue from this journal is also available for purchase for $29.00 USD.
This issue contains 21 articles in total
- Contributors
- Introduction: Reading History, Memory, and Forgetting
- Forgetting New Orleans
- Trauma Narrative, Memorialization, and Mourning in Phyllis Alesia Perry's Stigmata
- Telling Forgotten Stories of Slavery in the Postmodern South
- "But what if I can't change?": Desire, Denial, and Melancholia in Randall Kenan's A Visitation of Spirits
- " I can't believe it was really real": Violence, Vietnam, and Bringing War Home in Bobbie Ann Mason's In Country
- Evil Empires: Blood Meridian, War in El Salvador, and the Burdens of Omniscience
- Restoration, Metanostalgia, and Critical Memory: Forms of Nostalgia in Contemporary Southern Poetry
- History and Intertextuality: A Transnational Reading of Eudora Welty's Losing Battles and Sindiwe Magona's Mother to Mother
- "Pretty as Pictures": Family Photography and Southern Postmemory in Porter's Old Mortality
- Making Civil Rights Harder: Literature, Memory, and the Black Freedom Struggle
- Mourning Emmett: "One Long Expansive Moment"
- A Southern Sublimation: Lynching Film and the Reconstruction of American Memory
- Jean Toomer's Cane and the Erotics of Mourning
- On Flags and Fraternities: Lessons on Cultural Memory and Historical Amnesia in Charles Chesnutt's "Po' Sandy"
- Surveying Memory: The Past in Black and White
- Writing Home
- Requiem for a Tall Man (for Thomas Covington Dent 1932—1998)
- Litany of Our Lady
- Morna
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