Gerund, Katharina (2016):
"Searching for Sisterhood:Friendship and Sorority Culture in Tajuana Butler's Sorority Sisters ."
Current Perspectives in Transnational Black Studies . Special issue of Black Studies Papers 2 .1 : 77 -98 .
"Searching for Sisterhood:
Journal Article
Link for Citation: http://resolver.sub.uni-goettingen.de/purl?fidaac-11858/2838
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Abstract
This essay examines Tajuana Butler’s Sorority Sisters (1998) regarding its portrayal of friendship, sisterhood, and sorority culture. The novel conceptualizes ‘sisterhood’ as a fictive kinship structure and emphasizes the empowering potential of friendship among women. It fully embraces sorority culture and presents pledging as a ‘social drama’ in all its facets. Overall, Sorority Sisters provides an intervention into dominant representations of sorority life and black femininity. Yet, this intervention hinges on a discursive system of control shaped by conventional femininity and an uncritical affirmation of the ideology, practices, and significance of sororities.