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Diasporic Subjectivity and Homing Desire in Fruit of the Lemon

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dc.creator Ozun, Sule Okuroglu
dc.creator Kuzgun, Canan
dc.date 2018-07-01T00:00:00Z
dc.date.accessioned 2021-12-03T11:29:22Z
dc.date.available 2021-12-03T11:29:22Z
dc.identifier 5e3f2c25-5390-4722-9bb4-abd92ab2c7e5
dc.identifier 10.1007/s11061-018-9565-9
dc.identifier https://avesis.sdu.edu.tr/publication/details/5e3f2c25-5390-4722-9bb4-abd92ab2c7e5/oai
dc.identifier.uri http://acikerisim.sdu.edu.tr/xmlui/handle/123456789/92126
dc.description Mass migrations and increasing movements of people, particularly after the World Wars from the former colonies to the colonial centres, have formed multicultural societies and complex diasporas. Since diaspora experience includes physical, emotional, and psychological border crossings, all essentializing distinctions between the colonizer and the colonized, centre and periphery, the self and the other, belonging and unbelonging based on the assumption about spaces being a fixed source for a coherent identity are deconstructed in liminal diasporic spaces. Thus, diasporic subjectivity is to be found in a web of relations and signifiers. Diasporic self combines diverse cultures, histories, and languages within itself, but it belongs to none of them totally. Hence, subjectivity, belonging and home turn into challenging terms, meanings of which change constantly according to the context they are used in. This diasporic liminality leads to homing desire, a kind of struggle to claim a homeland, a desire to belong. The aim of this paper is to discuss the idea of diasporic subjectivity and homing desire in relation to the novel Fruit of the Lemon by British Caribbean writer Andrea Levy. This paper is an attempt to trace the process of subjectification in a diasporic context, paying particular attention to the mapping of new subject positions in multicultural spaces. The drawbacks faced by the Caribbean diasporians living in their Mother Country, Britain, their complex sense of belonging and the homing desire shaping their lives are discussed through the protagonist of the novel, Faith Jackson.
dc.language eng
dc.rights info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess
dc.title Diasporic Subjectivity and Homing Desire in Fruit of the Lemon
dc.type info:eu-repo/semantics/article


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