Posthuman interventions in submerged histories: reconstructing history through memory in Rivers Solomon’s The Deep

A community’s collective memory is predominantly shaped by dominant power structures that generate and contain canonical narratives. Within the post-colonial context, this social memory remains in conflict with certain ancestral or tribal memories that witnessed the violent legacies of colonization....

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Main Authors: Abhishika Dawn, G. Alan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2025-08-01
Series:Frontiers in Sociology
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Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fsoc.2025.1612388/full
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author Abhishika Dawn
G. Alan
author_facet Abhishika Dawn
G. Alan
author_sort Abhishika Dawn
collection DOAJ
description A community’s collective memory is predominantly shaped by dominant power structures that generate and contain canonical narratives. Within the post-colonial context, this social memory remains in conflict with certain ancestral or tribal memories that witnessed the violent legacies of colonization. These memories, which are transmitted across generations—termed postmemory—aims to reclaim and expose the officially silenced histories through the production of counter-memory. Rivers Solomon’s The Deep (2019) explores the historical injustices inflicted upon the African community during the transatlantic slave trade, their impact on successive generations, and the production of counter-memories as a means of resistance and collective catharsis. Solomon crafts a narrative populated by posthuman characters, who in a life-death continuum, embody postmemories and transform their suffering into resistance through the articulation of counter-memories. Through the concept of postmemory, Solomon engages in the process of mourning, simultaneously incorporating counter-memory to call attention to what has been erased from the collective narratives. The paper also seeks to explore the creative reworkings of historical events through posthuman figurations that defy the normative power location of the subject position, highlighting how these concepts intersect to facilitate new avenues for understanding collective experiences of trauma and resilience in the face of systemic erasure.
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spelling doaj-art-a0c2ecc2e6a544b0a17d60cb53339e452025-08-25T04:10:13ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Sociology2297-77752025-08-011010.3389/fsoc.2025.16123881612388Posthuman interventions in submerged histories: reconstructing history through memory in Rivers Solomon’s The DeepAbhishika DawnG. AlanA community’s collective memory is predominantly shaped by dominant power structures that generate and contain canonical narratives. Within the post-colonial context, this social memory remains in conflict with certain ancestral or tribal memories that witnessed the violent legacies of colonization. These memories, which are transmitted across generations—termed postmemory—aims to reclaim and expose the officially silenced histories through the production of counter-memory. Rivers Solomon’s The Deep (2019) explores the historical injustices inflicted upon the African community during the transatlantic slave trade, their impact on successive generations, and the production of counter-memories as a means of resistance and collective catharsis. Solomon crafts a narrative populated by posthuman characters, who in a life-death continuum, embody postmemories and transform their suffering into resistance through the articulation of counter-memories. Through the concept of postmemory, Solomon engages in the process of mourning, simultaneously incorporating counter-memory to call attention to what has been erased from the collective narratives. The paper also seeks to explore the creative reworkings of historical events through posthuman figurations that defy the normative power location of the subject position, highlighting how these concepts intersect to facilitate new avenues for understanding collective experiences of trauma and resilience in the face of systemic erasure.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fsoc.2025.1612388/fullposthumanpostmemorycounter-memorycatharsisslave trade
spellingShingle Abhishika Dawn
G. Alan
Posthuman interventions in submerged histories: reconstructing history through memory in Rivers Solomon’s The Deep
Frontiers in Sociology
posthuman
postmemory
counter-memory
catharsis
slave trade
title Posthuman interventions in submerged histories: reconstructing history through memory in Rivers Solomon’s The Deep
title_full Posthuman interventions in submerged histories: reconstructing history through memory in Rivers Solomon’s The Deep
title_fullStr Posthuman interventions in submerged histories: reconstructing history through memory in Rivers Solomon’s The Deep
title_full_unstemmed Posthuman interventions in submerged histories: reconstructing history through memory in Rivers Solomon’s The Deep
title_short Posthuman interventions in submerged histories: reconstructing history through memory in Rivers Solomon’s The Deep
title_sort posthuman interventions in submerged histories reconstructing history through memory in rivers solomon s the deep
topic posthuman
postmemory
counter-memory
catharsis
slave trade
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fsoc.2025.1612388/full
work_keys_str_mv AT abhishikadawn posthumaninterventionsinsubmergedhistoriesreconstructinghistorythroughmemoryinriverssolomonsthedeep
AT galan posthumaninterventionsinsubmergedhistoriesreconstructinghistorythroughmemoryinriverssolomonsthedeep