Sexuality and Healing in the African Diaspora: A Transnational Approach to Toni Morrison and Gyasi
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This article examines the literary production of two writers from the African diaspora,
specifically African American Toni Morrison’s A Mercy (2008), and Ghanaian-American Yaa
Gyasi’s Homegoing (2016), to explore their significance as counter-narratives that defy the “official”
historiography of enslavement times in order to set the records straight, as it were. By highlighting
these women writers’ project of resistance against normative definitions of black bodies, it is my
contention that these works effectively mobilize notions of race, gender, and sexuality. Revisiting the
harmful and denigrating legacy of stereotypical designation of enslaved women, these writers make
significant political and literary interventions to facilitate the recovery, wholeness, and sanctity of the
violated and abjected black body. In their attempt to counter ongoing processes of commodification,
exploitation, fetishization, and sexualization, I argue that these writers chronicle new forms of identity
and agency that promote individual and generational healing and care as forms of protest and
resistance against toxic definitions of hegemonic gender and sexuality
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Gallego Durán, M. M. (2019). Sexuality and Healing in the African Diaspora: A Transnational Approach to Toni Morrison and Gyasi. Humanities, 8(4), 183. DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/h8040183














