Home and Diasporic Belonging: Sam Selvon’s The Lonely Londoners and Hanif Kureishi’s The Buddha of Suburbia
Subject Areas : All areas of language and translation
1 - Assistant Professor of English Literature,English Department. Faculty of Literature, Humanities, and Social Sciences Islamic Azad University, Science and Research Branch, Tehran
Keywords: Home, Hanif Kureishi, Sam Selvon, Postcolonialism, Belonging,
Abstract :
The current paper examines the ways the concepts of ̳home‘ and ̳belonging‘ are conceived, accepted, and imagined by the characters of Sam Selvon‘s The Lonely Londoners (1956) and Hanif Kureishi‘s The Buddha of Suburbia (1990). Taken from two different but close-knit periods in twentieth-century Eng- land, the 1950s and the late 1970s, the novels represent the socio-political circumstances that formulated, and consolidated the discursive and ideological constructs, the operation of which had been aimed at im- peding the immigrant characters‘ conceptualisation of England as home. The paper explains the moments in the narratives that testify to the systematic discriminating and undermining practices via which the pro- tagonists‘ consciousness of home is destabilised, if not completely torpedoed. Employing postcolonial criticism as the theoretical framework, the current study unravels that although the British immigration policies in the periods in question encouraged multiculturalism, there was a handful of cultural and eco- nomic issues that practically impinged on the full realisation of such an anticipation. To this end, built upon the postcolonial theories of less acknowledged thinkers as Stuart Hall, Paul Gilroy, and Avtar Brah, whose theories enjoy identity- and race-related imbrications, the research underpins the transitory exposi- tion of the meaning of home, belonging, and diasporic nostalgia. It will demonstrate that the discursive representation of immigration proves that home and belonging are defined essentially not on the basis of multiculturalism, but on that of ideological and racial dogma, as the novels in question illustrate.
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