The aim of this essay is to examine the tension at the heart of the British colonial discourse as it affects the relationship of Travis and Joyce in the chapter "Somewhere in England", in Caryl Phillips's 1993 novel, Crossing the River. The thesis of the essay is that the colonial discourse of the British insists on a racial signifier in the imagined community of the British, and thus resists the idea that a person can be both black and British. The postcolonial analysis shows that it is Joyce's rejection of the national discourse along with the displacement of Travis from a segregated America into a superficially kinder environment that allows their relationship to develop. Yet, along with Travis's death, the contradictions and hypocrisy o...
This dissertation traces the ways in which nineteenth-century fictional narratives of white settleme...
This thesis is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Masters of Art...
The purpose of this essay is to look into how Jean Rhys describes the complexity of colonialism in t...
Caryl Phillips’s novel Crossing the River deals with European colonialism and the consequences of it...
Abstract The aim of this essay is to explain why Caryl Phillips presents Joyce as "the adopted dau...
Caryl Phillis’s novel Crossing the River tells a story of the African diaspora caused by the slave t...
Although Caryl Phillips’s Crossing the River has received considerable critical attention, the focus...
The aim of this essay is to explore motherhood in two postcolonial literary works by African America...
The present paper is an attempt to examine Caryl Phillips’ Crossing the River from postcolonial pers...
In the first chapter of Crossing the River (1993), Caryl Phillips depicts the dilemma of a fluid ide...
My major purpose in studying Caryl Phillips’s widely acclaimed novel Crossing the River is to examin...
This essay analyses the life of Joyce, the protagonist in “Somewhere in England”, the fourth section...
This article examines how Caryl Phillips in his novel A Distant Shore depicts gender and racial oppr...
The old (slavery, indentured workers) and new (refugees, comfort women, immigrants seeking jobs) dia...
Set against the backdrop of the Transatlantic slave trade, Caryl Phillips’s Crossing the River can b...
This dissertation traces the ways in which nineteenth-century fictional narratives of white settleme...
This thesis is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Masters of Art...
The purpose of this essay is to look into how Jean Rhys describes the complexity of colonialism in t...
Caryl Phillips’s novel Crossing the River deals with European colonialism and the consequences of it...
Abstract The aim of this essay is to explain why Caryl Phillips presents Joyce as "the adopted dau...
Caryl Phillis’s novel Crossing the River tells a story of the African diaspora caused by the slave t...
Although Caryl Phillips’s Crossing the River has received considerable critical attention, the focus...
The aim of this essay is to explore motherhood in two postcolonial literary works by African America...
The present paper is an attempt to examine Caryl Phillips’ Crossing the River from postcolonial pers...
In the first chapter of Crossing the River (1993), Caryl Phillips depicts the dilemma of a fluid ide...
My major purpose in studying Caryl Phillips’s widely acclaimed novel Crossing the River is to examin...
This essay analyses the life of Joyce, the protagonist in “Somewhere in England”, the fourth section...
This article examines how Caryl Phillips in his novel A Distant Shore depicts gender and racial oppr...
The old (slavery, indentured workers) and new (refugees, comfort women, immigrants seeking jobs) dia...
Set against the backdrop of the Transatlantic slave trade, Caryl Phillips’s Crossing the River can b...
This dissertation traces the ways in which nineteenth-century fictional narratives of white settleme...
This thesis is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Masters of Art...
The purpose of this essay is to look into how Jean Rhys describes the complexity of colonialism in t...