Description
Elizabeth A. Povinelli's inheritance was passed down not through blood or soil but through a framed map of Trentino, Alto Adige-the region where family's ancestral alpine village is found. Far more than a map hanging above the family television, the image featured colors and lines that held in place the memories and values fueling the Povinelli family's fraught relationships with the village and with each other. In her graphic memoir The Inheritance, Povinelli explores the events, traumas, and powers that divide and define our individual and collective pasts and futures. Weaving together stories of her grandparents' flight from their village in the early twentieth century to the fortunes of their knife-grinding business in Buffalo, New York, and her own Catholic childhood in a shrinking Louisiana woodlands of the 1960s and 1970s, Povinelli describes the serial patterns of violence, dislocation, racism and structural inequality that have shaped not only her life but the American story. Plumbing the messy relationships among nationality, ethnicity, kinship, religion, and belonging, The Inheritance takes us into the gulf between the facts of history and the stories we tell ourselves to survive and justify them.
Author: Elizabeth a. Povinelli
Publisher: Duke University Press
Published: 03/26/2021
Pages: 336
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 1.27lbs
Size: 10.00h x 7.00w x 0.69d
ISBN13: 9781478014034
ISBN10: 1478014032
BISAC Categories:
- Social Science | Anthropology | Cultural & Social
- Biography & Autobiography | General
- Social Science | Ethnic Studies | General
Author: Elizabeth a. Povinelli
Publisher: Duke University Press
Published: 03/26/2021
Pages: 336
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 1.27lbs
Size: 10.00h x 7.00w x 0.69d
ISBN13: 9781478014034
ISBN10: 1478014032
BISAC Categories:
- Social Science | Anthropology | Cultural & Social
- Biography & Autobiography | General
- Social Science | Ethnic Studies | General
About the Author
Elizabeth A. Povinelli is Franz Boas Professor of Anthropology and Gender Studies at Columbia University and a founding member of the Karrabing Film Collective. Her most recent book is Geontologies: A Requiem to Late Liberalism, also published by Duke University Press.