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Abstract

Drawing on diaspora youth studies and recent theorisations on liminality in the short-story genre (Achilles & Bergmann, 2015), this essay seeks to examine the social and psychological anxieties affecting the teenage protagonists of two short stories set in contemporary Britain: “We Who?” by Nikesh Shukla and “Fortune Favours the Bold” by Yasmin Rahman, both published in A Change is Gonna Come (2017). This multi-authored collection testifies to a recent upsurge in the publication of identity-based anthologies in Britain, and it certainly stands out for containing more than one short story centred on mental health issues—a topic that is still taboo within many ethnic minority communities, and one that is largely unexplored within social research (Mirza, 2017). Albeit to different degrees, the two short stories under scrutiny here portray ethnic-minority teenagers that experience mental distress as a result of their liminal position in a British society riven by new cultural anxieties, the pre-Brexit debate in Shukla’s “We Who?” and the threat of terrorism in Rahman’s “Fortune Favours the Bold”. Confusing the boundaries between page and screen, the authors incorporate social media into the fabrics of the texts; and, in so doing, they glimpse at both the way adolescents make meaning of their identity positions and positionalities through the Internet, and the impact of social networking on the fragile subjectivity of their adolescent female protagonists.

In: Postcolonial Youth in Contemporary British Fiction

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.

Open Access
In: Postcolonial Youth in Contemporary British Fiction
The concepts of 'youth' and the 'postcolonial' 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.