Violence, Faith, and Women in Romanian Literature

This essay offers a gendered reading of the confluence of violence and faith in Romanian literature, through a reading of two texts: Tatiana Bran’s “Deadly Confession”, and Elie Wiesel’s “Night”. While the former looks at the violence visited upon women in the context of religion and faith, the latt...

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Main Authors: Chandra Giti, Bădulescu Sanda-Marina
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2017-08-01
Series:Holistica
Subjects:
n3
z1
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/hjbpa-2017-0014
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spelling doaj-fb5283e11166424f92dd4d4b7746adc12021-09-06T19:19:50ZengSciendoHolistica2067-97852017-08-0182697810.1515/hjbpa-2017-0014hjbpa-2017-0014Violence, Faith, and Women in Romanian LiteratureChandra Giti0Bădulescu Sanda-Marina1Associated Scholar PhD., United Nations University, Gender Equality Studies and Training Dept, 3rd Floor, Gimli, University of Iceland, Saemundargata 3, 101 Reykjavik, IcelandProfessor PhD., “Dimitrie Cantemir” Christian University of Bucharest, 176, Splaiul Unirii, District 4, BucharestThis essay offers a gendered reading of the confluence of violence and faith in Romanian literature, through a reading of two texts: Tatiana Bran’s “Deadly Confession”, and Elie Wiesel’s “Night”. While the former looks at the violence visited upon women in the context of religion and faith, the latter seeks to locate the place of women in the course of the loss of faith in a male context. The essay embeds these readings within the larger context of women and violence in Romanian literature from the 19th century to the present. While the instance of Bran’s novel serves as representative of much of this literature, the example of Wiesel’s autobiographical narrative is uniquely contextualized by the field of Holocaust literature. Nevertheless, it is possible to see these two readings – one, a woman authored text of violence against women, the other, a male authored text of women as a refuge from violence – as complementing each other in the ways in which women respond to faith and the loss of faith.https://doi.org/10.1515/hjbpa-2017-0014womenviolencefaithholocaust studiesromanian literaturen3z1
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chandra Giti
Bădulescu Sanda-Marina
spellingShingle Chandra Giti
Bădulescu Sanda-Marina
Violence, Faith, and Women in Romanian Literature
Holistica
women
violence
faith
holocaust studies
romanian literature
n3
z1
author_facet Chandra Giti
Bădulescu Sanda-Marina
author_sort Chandra Giti
title Violence, Faith, and Women in Romanian Literature
title_short Violence, Faith, and Women in Romanian Literature
title_full Violence, Faith, and Women in Romanian Literature
title_fullStr Violence, Faith, and Women in Romanian Literature
title_full_unstemmed Violence, Faith, and Women in Romanian Literature
title_sort violence, faith, and women in romanian literature
publisher Sciendo
series Holistica
issn 2067-9785
publishDate 2017-08-01
description This essay offers a gendered reading of the confluence of violence and faith in Romanian literature, through a reading of two texts: Tatiana Bran’s “Deadly Confession”, and Elie Wiesel’s “Night”. While the former looks at the violence visited upon women in the context of religion and faith, the latter seeks to locate the place of women in the course of the loss of faith in a male context. The essay embeds these readings within the larger context of women and violence in Romanian literature from the 19th century to the present. While the instance of Bran’s novel serves as representative of much of this literature, the example of Wiesel’s autobiographical narrative is uniquely contextualized by the field of Holocaust literature. Nevertheless, it is possible to see these two readings – one, a woman authored text of violence against women, the other, a male authored text of women as a refuge from violence – as complementing each other in the ways in which women respond to faith and the loss of faith.
topic women
violence
faith
holocaust studies
romanian literature
n3
z1
url https://doi.org/10.1515/hjbpa-2017-0014
work_keys_str_mv AT chandragiti violencefaithandwomeninromanianliterature
AT badulescusandamarina violencefaithandwomeninromanianliterature
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