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ID141469
Title ProperMigrant women, place and identity in contemporary women’s writing
LanguageENG
AuthorKrummel, Sharon
Summary / Abstract (Note)While recent scholarship on migration has reflected growing attention to gender and to the intersectionality of race, gender and sexuality, there has been little focus on women’s emotional and bodily responses to migration in the context of larger structures of sexism, racism and the legacies of colonialism. In this paper, I examine some literary portrayals of how migrant women’s relationships with specific places of origin and settlement, both steeped in structural relationships of unequal power and experienced on an immediate, psychological and bodily plane, are fundamental to migrant women’s changing sense of belonging and identity. Jamaica Kincaid in her novel Lucy, Tsitsi Dangarembga in her novel Nervous Conditions and Dionne Brand in the opening poems of her volume No Language is Neutral evoke some of the complex ways in which migration can affect women’s lives and identities, thus both complementing and critiquing some contemporary theorisations of migration and migrant identities.
`In' analytical NoteIdentities: Global Studies in Culture and Power Vol. 22, No.6; Dec 2015: p.722-738
Journal SourceIdentities: Global Studies in Culture and Power 2015-12 22, 6
Key WordsMigration ;  Women ;  Place ;  Literature ;  Intersectionality ;  Embodiment