Publish and Flourish: Vanessa de Veritch Woodside

banner

Publish and Flourish is an annual event that celebrates the accomplishments of our staff and faculty who have published monographs within the past year. The UW Tacoma Library purchases all staff and faculty publications to make them available to our campus community. This year’s event is being hosted online through our blog. 

This week we are highlighting:

Ripped Apart: Unsettling Narratives of Transnational Migration

Author: Vanessa de Veritch Woodside

Department: Division of Culture, Arts, & Communication in the School of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences

Book cover for "Ripped Apart: Unsettling Narratives of Transnational Migration" by Vanessa de Veritch WoodsideRipped Apart: Unsettling Narratives of Transnational Migration is an innovative and interdisciplinary analysis of Latina narratives of transnational migration that underscore the intersections of the physical, psychological, sociocultural, and legal / structural traumas endured by migrants and their families. Grounded in theories of narrative empathy and the representation of trauma, Ripped Apart analyzes the techniques that Latina writers of various literary genres deploy to develop empathy, interrogate the representation of migrants in dominant discourse, and condemn the structures and institutions that continue to contribute to the separation of families.

An excellent introduction to critical Latina texts that address migration and family separation, Ripped Apart incorporates an overview of US immigration policies and practices and notions of citizenship, legality, and whiteness that have resulted in conceptualizations of immigrants as permanent foreigners, criminals, or threats to US society, and provides sociohistorical context regarding the often obscured or omitted historical chapters that serve as the texts’ backdrops. In describing how and why Latina narratives reveal the hidden stories of the impact of transnational migration on women and children, Ripped Apart demonstrates the power of literature and storytelling to unsettle the reader, modify cognitive schemas, and create real-world positive change.”
Texas Tech University Press

Find the book in the UW Libraries catalog here.

Learn more about the author here.

The UW Tacoma Library is very proud of your accomplishments, Vanessa de Veritch Woodside. Congratulations!