Towards a black british fiction of memory: narrating the peripheral space of english identity in andrea levy ‘small island

dc.contributor.authorAaid, Salah Eddine
dc.contributor.authorMAOUI, Hocine
dc.date.accessioned2022-05-16T01:01:08Z
dc.date.available2022-05-16T01:01:08Z
dc.date.issued2019
dc.description.abstractThe present paper aims at exploring how English identity is reconstructed through the narrative of memory in Small Island by the Black British writer Andrea Levy. It is argued that the narrative of this latter carries in its seeds a transnational memory that crosses the exclusive boundary of post-war identity that Britain underwent during the 1940s. This form of aesthetics has genuinely grounded the diasporic experience in the British cultural memory so that it became a warm home for the Caribbean immigrants of the Windrush Generation. Being written in the first decade of the twenty-first century, the novel highly contributes to enlighten contemporary multicultural Britain by creating multiracial sites of memory that function as new markers of British identity.ar
dc.identifier.issn1112-9255
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/123456789/13138
dc.language.isootherar
dc.publisherRevue des sciences humainesar
dc.subjectBlack representationar
dc.subjectCollective memoryar
dc.subjectEnglish identityar
dc.subjectBlack British Fictionar
dc.titleTowards a black british fiction of memory: narrating the peripheral space of english identity in andrea levy ‘small islandar
dc.typeArticlear
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