Memory,History, and Community:Ground Orientation in Barbara Kingslover’s Animal Dreams
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Department of English
Abstract
This thesis explores the notion of “ground orientation” in Barbara Kingslover’s novel
Animal Dreams. Central to “ground orientation,” is the idea of interrelatedness across
the community based on an awareness of the past, of the environment and the ground
beneath our feet. The novel’s interwoven theme of “ground orientation” is revealed by
Codi and Homer’s different but interdependent narratives. These narratives explore
their individual and collective identities, through a combination of memories
grounded in the characters’ reality than others. Memories are explored to reveal not
only the importance of recollections but also to inform the characters’ personal and
political present and to reveal further the limitations of personal memory. Somewhere
between Codi and Homer’s narratives lies the history the Nolines and of Grace. It is
only by putting theirmemories together; Kingsolver reveals the importance of broader
community and history.
