Unhomely England in Post-Imperial British Novels

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A01=Soody Gholami
Arthur & George
Author_Soody Gholami
British colonialism
British social policy
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Category=NHTQ
class and gender analysis
decolonisation studies
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Home
Indigo
national identity formation
Post-Imperial British Novels
Postcolonial theory
postwar British literature critique
psychoanalytic criticism
racial inequality Britain
The Nature of Blood
Unheimlich
Unhomely England
Zadie Smith's NW

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032333786
  • Weight: 530g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Jan 2026
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book investigates the nature of ‘home’ and nation in post-imperial British novels, which deal with the loss of Empire and its uncanny presence ‘at home’. It delves into histories of British colonialism, the ‘end’ of the Empire, decolonisation, post-Second World War nation-building, and devolution; all of which resurface in four selected novels of the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries: Marina Warner’s Indigo (1992), Caryl Phillips’s The Nature of Blood (1997), Julian Barnes’s Arthur & George (2005), and Zadie Smith’s NW (2012).

Soody Gholami draws on postcolonial theory and Freud’s unheimlich, translated as unhomely and uncanny, to investigate the novels’ engagement with postwar government policies, specifically in the areas of social housing, the British Welfare State and the National Curriculum. The analytical perspective highlights the novels’ evocation of unhomely England that challenges underlying illiberal and jingoistic national narratives. Exploring the writers’ different depictions of home interiors, architectural features and British local landscapes, this book argues that post-imperial British novels continue to highlight racial, gendered and class inequalities that undergird domestic perceptions of belonging and national identity in post-imperial Britain. Gholami also refers to Brexit as the symptom and result of the unresolved history and legacy of colonialism, which the novels studied have anticipated all along.

Combining postcolonial, literary critical, and psychoanalytical methodology, this book will be of interest to scholars of literature, postcolonial studies, social policy and other disciplines that engage with the concept of home.

Soody Gholami received a PhD from Birkbeck College, University of London. She has been awarded the Open Society University Network (OSUN) Residential Fellowship as part of the Threatened Scholars Integration Initiative and her post-doctorate project is ‘Decolonizing the Curriculum in Post-Brexit Britain’.

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