Back to Search
Start Over
Weltreiche: Zur Darstellung prekärer Arbeit in zwei ,Hotelromanen' von Monica Ali und Ali Smith.
- Source :
- Colloquium Helveticum; 2022, Issue 51, p177-189, 13p
- Publication Year :
- 2022
-
Abstract
- Two British novels exemplify an observation made analysing a larger corpus of contemporary 'hotel novels': both Ali Smith's Hotel World (2002) and Monica Ali's In the Kitchen (2009) focus on the hotel as a precarious workplace, with women being most vulnerable to its exploitative structures. The Imperial Hotel in Ali's novel is an architectural relic from the British Empire; a setting, where the migrant workers' labour conditions become evident. The Global Hotel in Smith's novel synthesises globalised and local structures, for instance by subverting the function of a hotel as a guest house accommodating affluent customers from all over the world: a receptionist opens the doors to a homeless woman, while the ghost of a female worker killed in an accident haunts the Global Hotel. The hotel has long served as a political metaphor when it comes to criticising liberal migration politics - especially in Britain, which the conservative MP Kenneth Baker referred to as "a sovereign nation, not a hotel" in 1995. In 2004, Tony Blair - then Prime Minister - famously said that "[w]e will neither be fortress Britain, nor will we be an open house". This paper explores these dialectics of openness and closeness in hotel fiction with a focus on the depiction of labour. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Subjects :
- HOTEL guests
LUXURY housing
BRITISH colonies
MIGRANT labor
GHOSTS
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- German
- ISSN :
- 01793780
- Issue :
- 51
- Database :
- Complementary Index
- Journal :
- Colloquium Helveticum
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 164122800