The themes of identity, belonging and its reverse, exclusion, have always been central to Caryl Phillips’ works of non-fiction and fiction. In particular, some essays published in two collections, A New World Order (2001) and Colour Me English (2011), and the novel A Distant Shore (2003) investigate to which extent refugees and immigrants are redesigning a new order in the modern globalised world and new notions of belonging and identification based on cultural plurality. In my article I will show the evolution of Phillips’ view on these topics in the first decade of the new millennium, with particular reference to the above-mentioned texts
peer reviewedFamily relationships are central to the way Caribbean writers define their identities. ...
International audienceProperly speaking, the exilic condition cannot be exactly equated with the dia...
The representation of Negro diaspora during slavery and in the modern world is analyzed within the c...
The themes of identity, belonging and its reverse, exclusion, have always been central to Caryl Phil...
WOS: 000209006000005This article discusses Caryl Phillips's novels The Final Passage (1985) and A Di...
This article examines how Caryl Phillips in his novel A Distant Shore depicts gender and racial oppr...
Caryl Phillips was born in St. Kitts in 1958. Among contemporary Caribbean writers, Phillips is dist...
The refugee has been traditionally perceived as an archetype of displacement and marginalisation, an...
The novels of Caryl Phillips have most commonly been approached from post-colonial theoretical persp...
peer reviewedAnglo-Caribbean author Caryl Phillips has often fictionalized the encounter of individu...
The old (slavery, indentured workers) and new (refugees, comfort women, immigrants seeking jobs) dia...
The postcolonial travelogue is one of travel writing's most prolific and innovative offsprings in th...
This article focuses on the rising hostility against immigrants / refugees and growing demand for ho...
How do the concepts “border,” “exile,” and “diaspora” shape individual and group identities across c...
Family relationships are central to the way Caribbean writers define their identities. This is parti...
peer reviewedFamily relationships are central to the way Caribbean writers define their identities. ...
International audienceProperly speaking, the exilic condition cannot be exactly equated with the dia...
The representation of Negro diaspora during slavery and in the modern world is analyzed within the c...
The themes of identity, belonging and its reverse, exclusion, have always been central to Caryl Phil...
WOS: 000209006000005This article discusses Caryl Phillips's novels The Final Passage (1985) and A Di...
This article examines how Caryl Phillips in his novel A Distant Shore depicts gender and racial oppr...
Caryl Phillips was born in St. Kitts in 1958. Among contemporary Caribbean writers, Phillips is dist...
The refugee has been traditionally perceived as an archetype of displacement and marginalisation, an...
The novels of Caryl Phillips have most commonly been approached from post-colonial theoretical persp...
peer reviewedAnglo-Caribbean author Caryl Phillips has often fictionalized the encounter of individu...
The old (slavery, indentured workers) and new (refugees, comfort women, immigrants seeking jobs) dia...
The postcolonial travelogue is one of travel writing's most prolific and innovative offsprings in th...
This article focuses on the rising hostility against immigrants / refugees and growing demand for ho...
How do the concepts “border,” “exile,” and “diaspora” shape individual and group identities across c...
Family relationships are central to the way Caribbean writers define their identities. This is parti...
peer reviewedFamily relationships are central to the way Caribbean writers define their identities. ...
International audienceProperly speaking, the exilic condition cannot be exactly equated with the dia...
The representation of Negro diaspora during slavery and in the modern world is analyzed within the c...