3.8 Article

BLACKNESS AND DIS/ABILITY IN THE AFROFUTURIST CHRISTMAS NOVELLA SYNCHRONICITY (2015) BY SHARON DODUA OTOO

Journal

GERMAN LIFE AND LETTERS
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/glal.12397

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The novella "Synchronicity" by Sharon Dodua Otoo explores the intersection of Blackness and dis/ability through the lens of DisCrit theory. The essay argues that Otoo effectively depicts the onset of an invisible dis/ability and experiences of Blackness and diaspora, while an Afrofuturist reading reveals the story as one of hope, self-acceptance, and community.
Charlie, the main character in Sharon Dodua Otoo's Afrofuturist Christmas novella Synchronicity, is a Black single mother of Ghanaian heritage working as a graphic designer in Berlin who has spent her whole life feeling the constraints of her ancestral traditions. When one day she starts losing her ability to see colours, she cannot disclose that family-specific dis/ability since it would have professional and material consequences. Charlie embarks on a journey of self-reflection, in the course of which she will realise that something that at first seemed to be a loss could, in fact, be a blessing in disguise. My essay analyses the intersection of Blackness and dis/ability in Synchronicity through the lens of DisCrit: a theoretical approach associating Disability Studies and Critical Race Theory, and argues that Otoo's novella manages to effectively depict the intersections regarding the onset of an invisible dis/abilty as well as Blackness and diasporic experiences, while an Afrofuturist reading of the novella allows us to consider it as a story based on hope, self-acceptance and the need for community.

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