This essay investigates the margins of twentieth-century American novel in the light of the increasingly deterritorialized status of US culture and literature – a literature whose borders need to be reconfigured not only in terms of reception, but of creation as well. In particular, the essay focuses on the Pakistani-born author H.M. Naqvi and his first novel, Home Boy (2009) – part immigrant narrative, part Bildungsroman, part 9/11 novel. Rooting Home Boy deep in the American grain and at the same time investigating the construction of Otherness through the protagonist’s “inoutsider” status and perspective, Naqvi explores the potential and the limits of what can be considered as “performative Americaness,” defined not by genealogic or geog...
This study investigates the nature, scope and implications of and reasons for Pakistanization of Eng...
This thesis explores cosmopolitan and humanist literary interventions by Palestinian, Israeli, India...
This paper explores the crossing of borders in Mohsin Hamid’s award-winning novel, The Rel...
This essay investigates the margins of twentieth-century American novel in the light of the increasi...
Western fiction about the 9/11 attacks tends to center white American experiences and perspectives, ...
As immigrant fiction continues to emerge from the South Asian diaspora across the globe, theories of...
This essay explores the dominant rhetoric of American society in the wake of 9/11 as seen through fi...
This paper documents the emergence of a new sub-genre of U.S. literature, encompassing narratives fo...
The terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001,led many Americans to vilify Muslims and Islam. Indeed, ...
The primary objective of this article is to assess Muslim immigrants' status in America after 9/11, ...
The purpose of this paper is to study Naqvi’s novel, Home Boy (2010) as a Neo Orientalist discourse ...
Immigration is simultaneously idealized in American cultural memory and demonized in contemporary po...
Since 9/11, the paradigms defining identity underwent a major transition. People came to be termed a...
Fiction by writers of Muslim background forms one of the most diverse, vibrant and high-profile corp...
Definitions of home and identity have changed for Muslims as a result of international “war on terro...
This study investigates the nature, scope and implications of and reasons for Pakistanization of Eng...
This thesis explores cosmopolitan and humanist literary interventions by Palestinian, Israeli, India...
This paper explores the crossing of borders in Mohsin Hamid’s award-winning novel, The Rel...
This essay investigates the margins of twentieth-century American novel in the light of the increasi...
Western fiction about the 9/11 attacks tends to center white American experiences and perspectives, ...
As immigrant fiction continues to emerge from the South Asian diaspora across the globe, theories of...
This essay explores the dominant rhetoric of American society in the wake of 9/11 as seen through fi...
This paper documents the emergence of a new sub-genre of U.S. literature, encompassing narratives fo...
The terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001,led many Americans to vilify Muslims and Islam. Indeed, ...
The primary objective of this article is to assess Muslim immigrants' status in America after 9/11, ...
The purpose of this paper is to study Naqvi’s novel, Home Boy (2010) as a Neo Orientalist discourse ...
Immigration is simultaneously idealized in American cultural memory and demonized in contemporary po...
Since 9/11, the paradigms defining identity underwent a major transition. People came to be termed a...
Fiction by writers of Muslim background forms one of the most diverse, vibrant and high-profile corp...
Definitions of home and identity have changed for Muslims as a result of international “war on terro...
This study investigates the nature, scope and implications of and reasons for Pakistanization of Eng...
This thesis explores cosmopolitan and humanist literary interventions by Palestinian, Israeli, India...
This paper explores the crossing of borders in Mohsin Hamid’s award-winning novel, The Rel...