The Transformative Power of Women's Life Writing in Post-Communist Europe: East-West Perceptions and Memory
Synopsis
This edited volume explores how women's life writing from post-Communist Europe turns the continent's most persistent fault line—the East-West divide—into a space of confrontation, vulnerability, and radical reimagining.Examining personal narratives from seven European countries (Poland, Romania, Slovakia, Ukraine, Germany, France, and the Netherlands), the volume demonstrates how women "write back" to Western gazes, decolonize memory, and unsettle entrenched hierarchies that continue to position Eastern Europe as the 'other Europe' even after the fall of communism and EU integration. By combining transnational, transdisciplinary, and embodied approaches from the fields of life writing, literature and memory studies, this volume proposes alternative modes of scholarly engagement that privilege personal experiences, relationality, vulnerability, and genuine exchange over abstraction, offering new perspectives on how European identities, histories, and futures might be thought together.Facilitating a distinctive collaboration among scholars from Eastern and Western Europe, The Transformative Power of Women's Life Writing in Post-Communist Europe will appeal to scholars and researchers with interests in women's life writing, European memory, memory studies, contested memory, post-communist Europe, and East-West perceptions.
Publisher information
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis
- ISBN: 9781032988283
- Number of pages: 294
- Languages: English
