What Women Lose: Exile and the Construction of Imaginary Homelands in Novels by Caribbean WritersPeter Lang, 2005 - 200 pages This book examines novels by women from the anglophone, francophone, and hispanophone Caribbean that focus on marginalized female characters who migrate to metropolitan centers. The novels studied require cultural, historical, sociological, anthropological, and geographic readings to fully explore the complexity of the characters as they confront the varied and changing challenges, hardships, and pleasures of the diaspora. The critical approach focuses on the characters' attempts to hold on to acceptable realities by assuming the appropriate interpersonal, social, and cultural masks that allow them to find a sense of significance in their interior, domestic, and community lives. |
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Page 9
... immigrants often found themselves at the bottom of the pile , sub- ject to the worst working conditions , the most overcrowded and unsatisfactory housing , and denied full access to a range of rights many believed were theirs by right ...
... immigrants often found themselves at the bottom of the pile , sub- ject to the worst working conditions , the most overcrowded and unsatisfactory housing , and denied full access to a range of rights many believed were theirs by right ...
Page 41
... immigrants . She has separated herself even from those immigrants — from Africa and the Maghreb — who had no relation to what and who she despised in Guadeloupe . Even though these are the cases Reynalda has to deal with in her job ...
... immigrants . She has separated herself even from those immigrants — from Africa and the Maghreb — who had no relation to what and who she despised in Guadeloupe . Even though these are the cases Reynalda has to deal with in her job ...
Page 62
... Immigrants in these situations are in the country , but are certainly not of it , preferring to see themselves as belonging else- where both socially and economically ” ( 465 ) . When the opposite situation occurs , as in the Cuban case ...
... Immigrants in these situations are in the country , but are certainly not of it , preferring to see themselves as belonging else- where both socially and economically ” ( 465 ) . When the opposite situation occurs , as in the Cuban case ...
Table des matières
CHAPTER | 1 |
CHAPTER 3 | 59 |
CHAPTER 4 | 121 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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Adella Africa Alvarez's América América's Dream American anglophone Caribbean Aurelia back home Bajan become Caribbean women citizenship Clare Coco Constancia Cuba Cuban culture Danticat's daugh daughter Desirada Diasporas Dionne Brand Dominican Republic Dulcita economic Elizete Esmeralda Santiago ethnic Exile father France francophone Geographies of Home Gisèle Pineau Grosfoguel Guadeloupe Haiti Haitian hispanophone hispanophone Caribbean home-building homeland husband Hyacinth Identity immigrants island Jamaica Juletane Julia leave live Loida Maritza London Lucy margins Marie-Noëlle married Maryse Condé Maryse Condé's memory metropole metropolitan Miami Michelle Cliff Monín mother move never nostalgia novels originally published parents Paris Pavana Pérez's Pilar place-making political Puerto Rican racial Ramona Reina Reynalda Rico Río Piedras Selina Silla social society Sophie space stay stories tion Toronto United Verlia wants Warner-Vieyra's West Indians woman women characters women writers Writing York Zee Edgell Zetou