Home is a central and contested emotional, imagined and physical location that is meaningful for every person. Using personal narratives and scholarly essays, this special issue works through the negotiations of history and belonging with topics from sexuality, immigrant status, ethnicity, and religion to class. The volume features personal reflections by Évelyne Trouillot, Lisa Outar, and Isis Semaj-Hall and critical essays by April Shemak, Lyneise Williams, Belinda Deneen Wallace, and Tanya L. Shields. Each contributor considers the implications of complicated homes, identities, and geographies—particularly the Caribbean and US South—and provides new shadings on this always relevant issue by juxtaposing the personal and the academic
This dissertation explores the historical and contemporary interactions between blackness and the st...
Migration stories appear frequently in Latin American Caribbean and African American literatures. Lo...
The question of home is a complicated one. While home is emplaced, the notion of home does not simpl...
This thesis explores the nature of home. It situates the idea of home, both as a physical place and ...
The movement of people throughout the world has lead to increased study about the lives of immigrant...
While home is often theorized as a category of space, the question of home for migrants is a complic...
Inhabiting Borders, Routes Home: Youth, Gender, Asylum by Ala SirriyehFarnham, UK: Ashgate, 2013...
This symposium explores how ‘home’ is a volatile mix of yearning and loss, of being at home or searc...
This thesis is an examination gathering of trauma, unhomeliness, and the use of non-traditional narr...
grantor: University of TorontoThe theory explicated in Home: A Space Called Anywhere was b...
This thesis investigates how diasporic Caribbean women writers use the vehicle of the novel to effec...
Where is home if you have no definitive place to call home, such as a house you grew up in and someo...
Contained within the following pages is a narrative inquiry which analyzes the impact of place upon ...
After the forceful displacement of people during the trans-Atlantic slave trade came another wave of...
This dissertation explores homecoming narratives and the representation of return migration in Afric...
This dissertation explores the historical and contemporary interactions between blackness and the st...
Migration stories appear frequently in Latin American Caribbean and African American literatures. Lo...
The question of home is a complicated one. While home is emplaced, the notion of home does not simpl...
This thesis explores the nature of home. It situates the idea of home, both as a physical place and ...
The movement of people throughout the world has lead to increased study about the lives of immigrant...
While home is often theorized as a category of space, the question of home for migrants is a complic...
Inhabiting Borders, Routes Home: Youth, Gender, Asylum by Ala SirriyehFarnham, UK: Ashgate, 2013...
This symposium explores how ‘home’ is a volatile mix of yearning and loss, of being at home or searc...
This thesis is an examination gathering of trauma, unhomeliness, and the use of non-traditional narr...
grantor: University of TorontoThe theory explicated in Home: A Space Called Anywhere was b...
This thesis investigates how diasporic Caribbean women writers use the vehicle of the novel to effec...
Where is home if you have no definitive place to call home, such as a house you grew up in and someo...
Contained within the following pages is a narrative inquiry which analyzes the impact of place upon ...
After the forceful displacement of people during the trans-Atlantic slave trade came another wave of...
This dissertation explores homecoming narratives and the representation of return migration in Afric...
This dissertation explores the historical and contemporary interactions between blackness and the st...
Migration stories appear frequently in Latin American Caribbean and African American literatures. Lo...
The question of home is a complicated one. While home is emplaced, the notion of home does not simpl...