Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Transgenerational Trauma in Adania Shibli’s Minor Detail: An Atkinsonian Reading of the Poetics of Affective Transmission
View through CrossRef
The research article investigates the representation of trauma in Palestinian English literature. The Palestinian English literature created by the Palestinian and diasporic writers is rich in trauma. The current study examines how some traumas do not end; they echo as if the past is breathing in present. In Adania Shibli’s Minor Detail(2017), a silent murder committed in the Negev desert in 1949 resonates decades later in the body, thoughts, and movements of a woman who never witnessed it, revealing how the past continues to breathe inside the present. Through the lens of Meera Atkinson’s The Poetics of Transgenerational Trauma (2017), the study argues that Shibli’s mirrored narrative; juxtaposing the assault of a Bedouin girl in 1949 with a present-day Palestinian woman’s obsessive investigation performs the very processes of affective transmission, recurrence, and embodied haunting that Atkinson identifies as central to inherited trauma. In Minor Detail, trauma moves “rhizomatically” through affective channels rather than biological inheritance.The researchers examine how the two narrative halves resonate despite temporal distance. The narrator’s physical fragility and her bodily responses to fear illustrate how Shibli renders inherited trauma somatically; enacting Atkinson’s insistence that transgenerational trauma operates through the body as much as through memory or narrative. Drawing on key textual moments, such as the narrator’s recognition that the girl was killed twenty-five years ago exactly before her birth date, and her admission of the truth that past will never stop chasing her, the researchers demonstrates how Shibli’s formal design performs the very mechanisms Atkinson theorizes: trauma returns not as remembered content but as an insistent echo, a rhythm carried through silence, repetition, and bodily vulnerability. It artistically constructs a poetics of transgenerational trauma revealing how the text transforms historical violence into an affective transmission that binds many generations together, exposing the consistent, gendered, and embodied nature of Palestinian trauma under occupation.
Academia (Private) Limited
Title: Transgenerational Trauma in Adania Shibli’s Minor Detail: An Atkinsonian Reading of the Poetics of Affective Transmission
Description:
The research article investigates the representation of trauma in Palestinian English literature.
The Palestinian English literature created by the Palestinian and diasporic writers is rich in trauma.
The current study examines how some traumas do not end; they echo as if the past is breathing in present.
In Adania Shibli’s Minor Detail(2017), a silent murder committed in the Negev desert in 1949 resonates decades later in the body, thoughts, and movements of a woman who never witnessed it, revealing how the past continues to breathe inside the present.
Through the lens of Meera Atkinson’s The Poetics of Transgenerational Trauma (2017), the study argues that Shibli’s mirrored narrative; juxtaposing the assault of a Bedouin girl in 1949 with a present-day Palestinian woman’s obsessive investigation performs the very processes of affective transmission, recurrence, and embodied haunting that Atkinson identifies as central to inherited trauma.
In Minor Detail, trauma moves “rhizomatically” through affective channels rather than biological inheritance.
The researchers examine how the two narrative halves resonate despite temporal distance.
The narrator’s physical fragility and her bodily responses to fear illustrate how Shibli renders inherited trauma somatically; enacting Atkinson’s insistence that transgenerational trauma operates through the body as much as through memory or narrative.
Drawing on key textual moments, such as the narrator’s recognition that the girl was killed twenty-five years ago exactly before her birth date, and her admission of the truth that past will never stop chasing her, the researchers demonstrates how Shibli’s formal design performs the very mechanisms Atkinson theorizes: trauma returns not as remembered content but as an insistent echo, a rhythm carried through silence, repetition, and bodily vulnerability.
It artistically constructs a poetics of transgenerational trauma revealing how the text transforms historical violence into an affective transmission that binds many generations together, exposing the consistent, gendered, and embodied nature of Palestinian trauma under occupation.
Related Results
Increased life expectancy of heart failure patients in a rural center by a multidisciplinary program
Increased life expectancy of heart failure patients in a rural center by a multidisciplinary program
Abstract
Funding Acknowledgements
Type of funding sources: None.
INTRODUCTION Patients with heart failure (HF)...
Primary PCI: a reasonable treatment for STEMI care during the COVID-19 pandemic
Primary PCI: a reasonable treatment for STEMI care during the COVID-19 pandemic
Abstract
Funding Acknowledgements
Type of funding sources: None.
Introduction
...
FAKTOR-FAKTOR YANG MEMPENGARUHI MORTALITAS PADA PASIEN DENGAN FRAKTUR COSTA: Literature Review
FAKTOR-FAKTOR YANG MEMPENGARUHI MORTALITAS PADA PASIEN DENGAN FRAKTUR COSTA: Literature Review
FAKTOR-FAKTOR YANG MEMPENGARUHI MORTALITAS PADA PASIEN DENGAN FRAKTUR COSTA: Literature Review Anna Tri Wahyuni1), Masfuri2), Liya Arista3)1,2,3 Fakultas Ilmu Keperawatan Univers...
Voice and Silence in Assia Djebar and Adania Shibli
Voice and Silence in Assia Djebar and Adania Shibli
Abstract
This essay considers the works of two Arab writers, Assia Djebar and Adania Shibli, to examine how silences in their texts are signs of both oppression and ...
Affective Forecasting: the Effects of Immune Neglect and Surrogation
Affective Forecasting: the Effects of Immune Neglect and Surrogation
Studies of affective forecasting examine people’s ability to predict (forecast) their emotional (affective) responses to future events. Affective forecasts underlie nearly all deci...
The effect of trauma advanced practice nurse programme at a Level I regional trauma centre in mainland China
The effect of trauma advanced practice nurse programme at a Level I regional trauma centre in mainland China
AbstractAimsTrauma is the fifth‐leading cause of death in China. Despite the establishment of the Chinese Regional Trauma Care System (CRTCS) in 2016, advanced trauma nurse practic...
Blunt Chest Trauma and Chylothorax: A Systematic Review
Blunt Chest Trauma and Chylothorax: A Systematic Review
Abstract
Introduction: Although traumatic chylothorax is predominantly associated with penetrating injuries, instances following blunt trauma, as a rare and challenging condition, ...
Trauma to the Abdomen and Pelvis
Trauma to the Abdomen and Pelvis
Abdominal trauma accounts for approximately 12% of all trauma. The evaluation of abdominal trauma is difficult as the patient may have concomitant distracting injuries or alteratio...

