This article addresses a blind spot in Brexit literary criticism: Britain’s relationship to the Middle East, particularly its historic responsibility for the plight of Palestinians. Although fiction that directly engages both Brexit and Israeli-Palestinian crisis has not yet appeared, oblique connections can be illuminated. Shared conceptual fields, albeit ones only partially brought into view in contemporary British fiction, emerge from intersecting historical experiences. The article considers a range of recent literary texts, with an emphasis on A Stranger City (2019) by British Jewish author Linda Grant and Fractured Destinies: A Novel (2018) by British-Palestinian author Raba’i al-Madhoun. When viewed in a certain light, Brexit motifs ...
Reading Brexit through BrexLit is a dissertation centred on the 2016 referendum on British exit from...
This article examines the representations of the Israeli Palestinian conflict in the British press, ...
The post-war years were a period of introspection for British society as the nation endeavoured to ...
The main purpose of this article is to explore the ways in which Linda Grant’s A Stranger City can b...
This article considers how postcolonial fiction anticipated, apprehended, and critically explored th...
Jewish and British histories were never more fatefully intertwined than during the 1930s and 40s, b...
The 2016 vote to leave the European Union has incited many tormenting debates regarding the present ...
Britain's vote to leave the European Union in the summer of 2016 came as a shock to many observers. ...
This chapter will examine the key cultural issue that defined the EU referendum: immigration. By ana...
In the years leading up the EU referendum, British society witnessed a sudden and violent shift towa...
This special issue offers a timely and current critical evaluation of the morbid symptoms and potent...
This special issue offers a timely and current critical evaluation of the morbid symptoms and potent...
This special issue offers a timely and current critical evaluation of the morbid symptoms and potent...
This article analyses two novels, Hanif Kureishi’s The Buddha of Suburbia (1990) and Andrea Levy’s S...
This special issue offers a timely and current critical evaluation of the morbid symptoms and potent...
Reading Brexit through BrexLit is a dissertation centred on the 2016 referendum on British exit from...
This article examines the representations of the Israeli Palestinian conflict in the British press, ...
The post-war years were a period of introspection for British society as the nation endeavoured to ...
The main purpose of this article is to explore the ways in which Linda Grant’s A Stranger City can b...
This article considers how postcolonial fiction anticipated, apprehended, and critically explored th...
Jewish and British histories were never more fatefully intertwined than during the 1930s and 40s, b...
The 2016 vote to leave the European Union has incited many tormenting debates regarding the present ...
Britain's vote to leave the European Union in the summer of 2016 came as a shock to many observers. ...
This chapter will examine the key cultural issue that defined the EU referendum: immigration. By ana...
In the years leading up the EU referendum, British society witnessed a sudden and violent shift towa...
This special issue offers a timely and current critical evaluation of the morbid symptoms and potent...
This special issue offers a timely and current critical evaluation of the morbid symptoms and potent...
This special issue offers a timely and current critical evaluation of the morbid symptoms and potent...
This article analyses two novels, Hanif Kureishi’s The Buddha of Suburbia (1990) and Andrea Levy’s S...
This special issue offers a timely and current critical evaluation of the morbid symptoms and potent...
Reading Brexit through BrexLit is a dissertation centred on the 2016 referendum on British exit from...
This article examines the representations of the Israeli Palestinian conflict in the British press, ...
The post-war years were a period of introspection for British society as the nation endeavoured to ...