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dissertation (2)

book (1)


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English (3)


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2024 (1)

2019 (1)

2011 (1)

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Dissertation
"The Happy Family Is a Myth for Many": Dysfunctional Families and Literary Parentage in Caryl Phillips' The Lost Child
Authors: --- --- ---
Year: 2019 Publisher: Liège Université de Liège (ULiège)

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Abstract

This paper focuses on the family patterns presented in Caryl Phillips' “The Lost Child”. Various psychoanalytical theories are used to analyse six processes occurring in the novel and a final chapter focuses on the family metaphor, literary parentage, intertextuality and identity.


Dissertation
Filiation and Affiliation in Caryl Phillips’s In the Falling Snow
Authors: --- --- ---
Year: 2024 Publisher: Liège Université de Liège (ULiège)

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This dissertation explores the notions of filiation and affiliation and aims to analyse the filial and affiliative relationships of the three main characters of Caryl Phillips's novel In the Falling Snow: Earl, his son Keith, and his grandson Laurie. Earl is a first-generation immigrant from the Caribbean who came to England as a member of the Windrush Generation. His immigration ruptured his filial relationship with his family as well as with the West Indies and forced him to find his place in the racist British culture of the 1960s. Furthermore, his silence about his origins and his life ruptured his bond with his son, Keith, who repeated this pattern with his own son Laurie. This dissertation intends to explain why In the Falling Snow can be seen as a postcolonial Bildungsroman which disrupts the preponderant Eurocentric notions of filiation and affiliation.


Book
Caryl Phillips, David Dabydeen and Fred D'Aguiar
Author:
ISBN: 1781703256 184779467X 9781781703250 9781847794673 0719082757 9780719082757 1847797806 0719097649 Year: 2011 Publisher: Manchester Manchester University Press

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Slavery is a recurring subject in works by the contemporary British writers Caryl Phillips, David Dabydeen and Fred D’Aguiar, yet their return to this past arises from an urgent need to understand the racial anxieties of twentieth- and twenty-first-century Britain. This book examines the ways in which their literary explorations of slavery may shed light on current issues in Britain today, or what might be thought of as the continuing legacies of the UK’s largely forgotten slave past. In this highly original study, Abigail Ward looks at a range of novels, poetry and non-fictional works by Phillips, Dabydeen and D’Aguiar in order to consider their creative responses to slavery. This is the first study to focus exclusively on contemporary British literary representations of slavery, and thoughtfully engages with such notions as the history, memory and trauma of slavery and the ethics of writing about this past. Written for students, academics and the general reader interested in contemporary British or Caribbean writing, this authoritative work offers a clear, accessible and interesting guide to the ways in which the transatlantic slave trade is represented in recent postcolonial literature.

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