Zadie Smith’s novel On Beauty confirms that the fiction of the second generation Caribbean diaspora has indeed arrived on the international scene, if indeed any confirmation was required after the phenomenal success of Smith’s first novel White Teeth. The status of Smith’s fiction in the Euro-American academy, which is also the setting of On Beauty, encourages an analysis of disciplinarity and institutionalization. I offer a reading of Smith’s representation of blackness in its institutional, social, and aesthetic dimensions
This thesis argues that contemporary mixed-race authors, such as Zadie Smith, are central cultural f...
In this essay, I will discuss Carter G. Woodson’s notion of the “mis-education” black Americans face...
This article interprets Zadie Smith's novel NW (2012) as an attempt to link E. M. Forster's famous d...
Zadie Smith’s 2005 novel, On Beauty, is a work that remains timely as it explores aesthetics in the ...
This article seeks to demonstrate that Zadie Smith’s fourth novel, NW (2012), deviates away from cel...
My thesis explores the emerging concerns of contemporary black British writing. I index the move tow...
This article focuses on the limits of liberal discourses such as multiculturalism in an increasing g...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Department of English, 2014.My dissertation examines a ser...
This article explores the literary and ideological connections between Zadie Smith’s On Beauty (2005...
There are many facets of feminist creolisation within Zadie Smith's novel On Beauty (2005). This art...
This thesis critically explores the conjunction of cosmopolitanism and contemporary black British wr...
This diploma paper demonstrates how issues of mixed race/non-British identity, racism, class, and mu...
Taking Zadie Smith’s most recent novel, NW (2012), as its subject, this master’s thesis engages in a...
Though Zadie Smith has published only three novels so far, her fiction seems to follow some astonish...
[[abstract]]Focusing on the novels produced by the diasporic British writers of Caribbean or Asian o...
This thesis argues that contemporary mixed-race authors, such as Zadie Smith, are central cultural f...
In this essay, I will discuss Carter G. Woodson’s notion of the “mis-education” black Americans face...
This article interprets Zadie Smith's novel NW (2012) as an attempt to link E. M. Forster's famous d...
Zadie Smith’s 2005 novel, On Beauty, is a work that remains timely as it explores aesthetics in the ...
This article seeks to demonstrate that Zadie Smith’s fourth novel, NW (2012), deviates away from cel...
My thesis explores the emerging concerns of contemporary black British writing. I index the move tow...
This article focuses on the limits of liberal discourses such as multiculturalism in an increasing g...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Department of English, 2014.My dissertation examines a ser...
This article explores the literary and ideological connections between Zadie Smith’s On Beauty (2005...
There are many facets of feminist creolisation within Zadie Smith's novel On Beauty (2005). This art...
This thesis critically explores the conjunction of cosmopolitanism and contemporary black British wr...
This diploma paper demonstrates how issues of mixed race/non-British identity, racism, class, and mu...
Taking Zadie Smith’s most recent novel, NW (2012), as its subject, this master’s thesis engages in a...
Though Zadie Smith has published only three novels so far, her fiction seems to follow some astonish...
[[abstract]]Focusing on the novels produced by the diasporic British writers of Caribbean or Asian o...
This thesis argues that contemporary mixed-race authors, such as Zadie Smith, are central cultural f...
In this essay, I will discuss Carter G. Woodson’s notion of the “mis-education” black Americans face...
This article interprets Zadie Smith's novel NW (2012) as an attempt to link E. M. Forster's famous d...