3.8 Article

OTHERTONGUES: MULTILINGUALISM, NATALITY AND EMPOWERMENT IN SHARON DODUA OTOO'S ADAS RAUM

Journal

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

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/glal.12403

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This article examines Sharon Dodua Otoo's novel "Adas Raum" and how it challenges dominant narratives and patriarchal models through the foregrounding of diasporic female figures. It reimagines community through intersubjective encounters and shared spaces, rejecting linear constructions of time and bounded concepts of nation and peoples. Otoo's narrative also explores the concept of "natality" as a model for political action that defies forms of domination, drawing from Hannah Arendt and Adriana Cavarero's writings. Additionally, Black feminist thought informs the ambivalent figuration of motherhood and the intersectional issues of gender, racial, and class discrimination.
Written in German by the Black British author and activist Sharon Dodua Otoo, the novel Adas Raum (2021) intervenes in contemporary debates on colonial legacies to forge 'a critical multilingualism' (Yildiz 2012), challenging master-narratives and tropes of founding fathers which privilege linear constructions of time and bounded concepts of nation and peoples. This article examines how Otoo foregrounds diasporic female figures as material agents by focusing on ambivalent experiences of childbearing, then argues that the multilingual feminist text rejects dualistic heteropatriarchal models to reconceive community in terms of intersubjective encounters and shared spaces. To illuminate the politics of Otoo's structural concern with rebirth, I take up the concept of 'natality' developed in the writings of Hannah Arendt and Adriana Cavarero, which offers a model for imagining possibilities of political action that defy forms of domination. Black feminist thought further informs the ambivalent figuration of motherhood in Otoo's narrative and its central preoccupation with intertwined issues of gender, racial and class discrimination. Challenging the ethnocentricity that has been identified throughout Arendt's oeuvre, Otoo reveals instead how fifteenth-century West African concepts of space and time can be understood as in dialogue with the post-war philosopher's understanding of natality as the central category of political thought.

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