Deconstructing gender narratives of abuse in Shange’s for colored girls who have considered suicide/ when the rainbow is enuf
Abstract
In for colored girls who have considered suicide/
when the rainbow is enuf, Ntozake Shange deconstructs patriarchal ideology through language by sharing the experiences of empowerment and disempowerment of seven women that belong to the black community in the 1970s. She employs an innovative genre, the
“choreopoem” which combines poetry, prose and stage
performance. This paper is highly vested in gender politics as the stories of these seven women revolve around
feminism. The play brings to the forefront the racial tensions that black women faced outside the black community but most importantly, it unravels the forces of subjugation that they experienced from within the very
black community they are part of, through the violent
behavior of black men towards their body. Issues such
as rape, abortion, assuming non-normative roles are explored. Attentive to the multiplicity of voices, Shange
yearns for the decolonization of black women from the
double oppression they experience outside and within
the black community by attaining agency through language and through projecting their voice..
URI
http://sinestesieonline.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/gennaio2022-08.pdfhttp://elea.unisa.it/xmlui/handle/10556/7336