6533b82bfe1ef96bd128d5bf
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Origins, Journey, and Home: The Issue of Identity in the Work of Three Diasporic “African-Indian” Women Writers
Lisa Caputosubject
NegotiationWork (electrical)media_common.quotation_subjectIdentity (social science)Gender studiesContext (language use)SociologyPostcolonial literatureColonial periodmedia_commondescription
This chapter considers the issue of identity in postcolonial literature. It challenges the representations of center/metropolis and margin/periphery as a one-to-one link. The three writers considered here are located within a context of intra-colonial displacements from India. Ananda Devi, Natacha Appanah, and Yasmin Alibhai-Brown offer a blurred vision of identity, and share some important common points: the three of them define the identity as fluid and multiple. The identities they speak about are the results of a personal negotiation with numerous and diversified external stimuli. Finally, they show a similar relationship with the themes of the origins, journey, and “home”.
| year | journal | country | edition | language |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2014-11-25 |