Domestic Intersections in Contemporary Migration Fiction

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A01=Lucinda Newns
Abdulrazak Gurnah
Africa
Andrea Levy
anti-racism scholarship
Asylum Stories
Author_Lucinda Newns
Bernadine Evaristo
Brick Lane
British literature
Buchi Emecheta
By the Sea
Caribbean Diaspora
Caribbean Diasporic
Caribbean Diasporic Community
Caribbean Diasporic Identity
Caribean
Category=DSBH5
contemporary literature
contemporary migration fiction
Dancehall Culture
diaspora
diaspora studies
Diasporic Fiction
displacement
domestic intersections
domestication
Emecheta's Novels
Emecheta's Work
Emecheta’s Novels
Emecheta’s Work
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
EU Free Movement
feminist theory
Gay Jamaicans
home
Home Syndrome
homelessness
homemaking
intersectional analysis of home spaces
intersectional feminism
intersectional feminist approach
islamic female
Judith Butler
Leila Aboulela
LGBTQ Politics
Lonely Londoners
migrant domesticity
migration
Monica Ali
Mr. Loverman
native
nativism
non-privileged migrants
Oppressed Muslim Woman
performativity
placement
Postcolonial studies
postcolonial theory
postmodern literature
Private Fostering
Queer Diasporic Subject
Queer Migrants
queer migration
queer theory
race
refuge
religion
second-class citizen
Sexual Contract
Small Island
South Asian
South Asian Food
Strange Bodies
The Translator
Van Lennep
women's bodies
WWII Period

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032239101
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Dec 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Domestic Intersections in Contemporary Migration Fiction responds to the need for a more materialist perspective on migration by reorienting the focus on domesticity and the everyday practices of homemaking and away from a celebratory and aestheticized reading of displacement. Centering on Britain as the location of arrival, its readings of canonical and underexplored works of diasporic fiction emanating from Africa, South Asia and the Caribbean foreground the significance of discourses of domesticity in supporting as well as resisting colonialism, racism and xenophobia. Applying an intersectional feminist approach, this book challenges the tendency to view the private sphere as a static, apolitical and uncreative space. Rather, Newns argues, we should regard the domestic home as a key site for contesting the terms of belonging within larger spaces and collectivities, such as the city and the nation. Ultimately, by demonstrating the material importance of homely spaces for non-privileged migrants like women, refugees and LGBTQ+ people, Domestic Intersections problematizes the critical suspicion towards home and placement in feminist, postcolonial and queer theory.

Lucinda Newns is a lecturer in World Literature at Queen Mary University of London. Her work has previously appeared in the Journal of Commonwealth Literature and the Journal of Postcolonial Writing and she is co-editor of New Directions in Diaspora Studies: Cultural and Literary Approaches (2018).

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