Wednesday, October 22, 2008
Edwidge Danticat and the Dew-Breaker
Edwidge Danticat spent the first twelve years of her life in Haiti before moving to a Haitian-American community in Brooklyn. Danticat was educated at Barnard College and Brown University and came to prominence at a very young age with the publication of her first book, Breath, Eyes, Memory in 1994. Attaining widespread critical praise upon its publication, she became the first Haitian-identified author to achieve renown in the United States and the acceptance of her work is seen to mark the beginning of a belated opening of American literary culture to the stories of women and people of color.
Danticat's writing focuses on a number of themes we've discussed in class--from the power of the past to the importance of telling stories in order to construct an identity. Her work also often represents another theme fundamental to our work in class, her sense of feeling pulled between a number of cultures: Haitian and American; black and white; English- and French Creole- speaking; the political and the literary.
The Dew-Breaker is a particularly interesting book to read alongside The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao because it shares many of the central preoccupations of Diaz's novel (not to mention the fact that Danticat and Diaz are good friends). However, Danticat's book more directly addresses the questions about torture and human rights that Diaz's introduce. Also, unlike Oscar Wao, The Dew-Breaker is not a conventional novel, but a series of linked stories that function much as a novel does. As you read, think about how Danticat's choice to render the narrative in this way affects your experience of The Dew-Breaker. What are your first impressions of the book?
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3 comments:
This obvious fact may have been pointed out in a day that I was absent from class, but I think it's interesting to note that Haiti and The Dominican Republic are both on the same island (Hispaniola), and they both are next to the relatively afluent Puerto Rico.
http://www.dominican-car-rental.com/image/hispaniola.gif
'The Dewbreaker,' reminds me more of African American literature I have read (stuff by Toni Morrison, Zora Neale Hurston, etc.), while 'Oscar Wao' is, quite honestly, not like anything I have read in a novel before. I guess I tend to read a lot of online things, fantasy, politics, or philosophy though, and not enough contemporary American literature (hell, not even enough to quite keep up in this classroom! hahaha), so I am fairly certain that its uniquity is only so to one as under-exposed as me. If it's contemproray, I have probably read it because it's something seemingly incendiary ("Letter to a Christian Nation," "Stuff White People Like," etc.).
I'm glad you're noticing the points of similarity, Christopher. I definitely assigned the books together in order to draw upon these geographic and other areas of overlap. Danticat and Diaz are great friends and often discuss how their works go at similar themes, even if from very different styles.
I did not realize that they were friends. That's kind of cool.
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