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Creolizing the metropole: migrant Caribbean identities in literature and film

Part of the Blacks in the Diaspora series
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Creolizing the Metropole is a comparative study of postwar West Indian migration to the former colonial capitals of Paris and London.

It studies the effects of this population shift on national and cultural identity and traces the postcolonial Caribbean experience through analyses of the concepts of identity and diaspora.

Through close readings of selected literary works and film, H.

Adlai Murdoch explores the ways in which these immigrants and their descendants represented their metropolitan identities.

Though British immigrants were colonial subjects and, later, residents of British Commonwealth nations, and the French arrivals from the overseas departments were citizens of France by law, both groups became subject to otherness and exclusion stemming from their ethnicities.

Murdoch examines this phenomenon and the questions it raises about borders and boundaries, nationality and belonging.

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Product Details
Indiana University Press
0253001323 / 9780253001320
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
08/06/2012
English
408 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
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