Liminal Identities and Cultural Hybridity of Third World Women in Women s Narratives — Yakut Akbay

Liminal Identities and Cultural Hybridity of Third World Women in Women s Narratives
Yakut AkbayAkademisyen Kitabevi
Liminal Identities and Cultural Hybridity of Third World Women in Women s Narratives
Yakut AkbayA Vindication of the Postcolonial Woman On the Necessity of Reading Andrea Levy Monica Ali and Sefi Atta Together Introduction Women Diaspora and the Third Space Refusing Assimilation Resisting Return Diasporic Women in Literature Hybridity Ambivalence and Belonging Theorising Diasporic Women s Subjectivities Challenging Monolithic Constructions The Scope and Structure of the Book Contribution and Originality References CHAPTER 1 Almost the Same but Never Quite Unsettling Mimicry and Identity in Andrea Levy s Small Island Introduction Andrea Levy and Caribbean Literature Journey from Jamaica to England Jamaica and the Mother Country Proper English Roots of the Colonial Mindset Colonial v Caribbean Culture Colonial Fantasy and Metropolitan Reality You re not qualified Internalised Mimicry Ideal English Home The Embedded Afterlife of the Empire Embracing the Space Which Is the Small Island Jamaica or England Conclusion Transformation of Self Space and the Essence of Belonging References CHAPTER 2 From Cultural Fatalism to Personal Agency Nazneen s Journey through Hybridity in Brick Lane Conclusion References CHAPTER 3 Displacement and Self Discovery Exploring Transnational Identity in Sefi Atta s A Bit Of Difference Conclusion References CONCLUSION AFTERWORD GLOSSARY OF TERMS

Akademisyen Kitabevi
Yakut Akbay s study Liminal Identities and Cultural Hybridity of Third World Women in Women s Narratives focuses on three novels by three writers Andrea Levy s Small Island 2004 Monica Ali s Brick Lane 2003 and Sefi Atta s A Bit of Difference 2012 All these novels and writers are significant in the field of contemporary diasporic literature Levy an English writer with Jamaican parentage writes about the life of Jamaicans in Britain the Bangladeshi British Ali depicts Bangladeshi immigrant lives in London and the Nigerian American Sefi Atta s work deals with Nigerian experiences between London and Lagos Akbay s careful scrutiny of the novels is a valuable contribution to the analysis of diasporic immigrant conditions of women Akbay analyses the novels women characters especially the protagonists Hortense Nazneen and Deola and how they negotiate their hybrid in between lives in London a former colonial centre The backgrounds times and conditions of the women are different but they all face similar problems with adapting to their new environment By locating the analyses of the novels in a postcolonial framework Akbay is able to pinpoint the sore points of diasporic women s lives and the causes of their resistance to assimilate