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Abstract
Six Stories & An Essay (2014), Andrea Levy’s only collection of short stories, opens up with the writer’s critical reflections on her hybrid identity, her family’s encounter with the Mother Land, their frustrated expectations of an improved life and the social ostracism they experienced on account of racist attitudes.
Levy’s hybrid identity, posed in an interstitial position with respect to her Jamaican and British cultural background —not fully an outsider yet not quite belonging to either category— is metaphorically signalled in the narrative by the presence of liminal, interstitial spaces placed at the margins of culture as well as by her choice of displaced, ex-centric subjects as narrators. Six Stories & An Essay Levy articulates an exploration —from a variety of angles and situations— of the survival strategies which British Jamaicans have historically used to “fit in” the metropolis and of the difficulties they most often encountered. The story here under examination, “Deborah”, figures prominently as the second narrative in the collection, and connects Levy’s personal experience with the collective history of the Jamaican diaspora. The narrative provides a reflection on the liminal position of the post-colonial subject by addressing how place, class and cultural identity crucially intervene in the making of both individual and collective identities as perceived by a first-person child-narrator.
Abstract
Youth and the postcolonial are united in that both inhabit a liminal locus where new ways of being in the world are rehearsed and struggle for recognition against the impositions of dominant power structures. Departing from this premise, the present volume focuses on the experience of postcolonial youngsters in contemporary Britain as rendered in fiction, thus envisioning the postcolonial as a site of fruitful and potentially transformative friction between different identitary variables or sociocultural interpellations. In so doing, this volume provides varied evidence of the ability of literature—and of the short story genre, in particular—to represent and swiftly respond to a rapidly changing world as well as to the new socio-cultural realities and conflicts affecting our current global order and the generations to come.
Contributors are: Isabel M. Andrés-Cuevas, Isabel Carrera-Suárez, Claire Chambers, Blanka Grzegorczyk, Bettina Jansen, Indrani Karmakar, Carmen Lara-Rallo, Laura María Lojo-Rodríguez, Noemí Pereira-Ares, Gérald Préher, Susanne Reichl, Carla Rodríguez-González, Jorge Sacido-Romero, Karima Thomas and Laura Torres-Zúñiga.
Contributors are: Isabel M. Andrés-Cuevas, Isabel Carrera-Suárez, Claire Chambers, Blanka Grzegorczyk, Bettina Jansen, Indrani Karmakar, Carmen Lara-Rallo, Laura María Lojo-Rodríguez, Noemí Pereira-Ares, Gérald Préher, Susanne Reichl, Carla Rodríguez-González, Jorge Sacido-Romero, Karima Thomas and Laura Torres-Zúñiga.