Gendered Trauma, Migration, and Female Survival in Hiroko Tanaka’s Journey in Burnt Shadows
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19426934
Keywords:
Feminist Trauma Studies, Nuclear Memory, Gendered Violence, Migration, Postcolonial FeminismAbstract
Kamila Shamsie’s Burnt Shadows offers a transnational exploration of violence through the lived experiences of Hiroko Tanaka, whose life is shaped by the atomic bombing of Nagasaki and later historical upheavals across South Asia and the United States. This article examines Hiroko’s experiences as a woman navigating nuclear trauma, migration, patriarchal expectations, and global political transformations. Using feminist theory, trauma studies, and postcolonial criticism, the study argues that Hiroko’s scarred body functions as a living archive of modern history, connecting the Second World War, colonial decline, Partition, and post-9/11 surveillance politics—her refusal to internalize hatred despite repeated displacement challenges nationalist narratives rooted in masculine power structures. Through textual analysis supported by established criticism, the article demonstrates how Shamsie constructs a feminist ethics of empathy through Hiroko’s resilience, autonomy, and cosmopolitan moral vision.
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