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The Scent of Memory: Strangers, Our Own and Others

Authors :
Avtar Brah
Source :
Feminist Review. 100:6-26
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2012.

Abstract

Using, as a point of departure, Tim Lott's recent autobiography where he attempts to make sense of his mother's suicide of 1988 through a reconstruction of his family genealogy, this article tries to map the production of gendered, classed, and racialized subjects and subjectivity in west London. It addresses the tension between Lott's discourse of his own white working-class boyhood during the 1970s where questions of ‘race’ are all but absent, and the racialized ‘commonsense’ that pervades the interviews with other local white contemporaries of Lott and his parents. These narratives are analysed in relation to the socio-economic context and the political activism of the period. Theoretically, it analyses the ‘diaspora space’ of London/Britain, interrogating essentialist ‘origin stories’ of belonging; reaching out to a glimmer on the horizon of emerging non-identical formations of kinship across boundaries of class, racism, and ethnicity; and exploring the purchase of certain South Asian terms – ‘ajnabi’, ‘ghair’, and ‘apna/apni’ – in constructing a non-binarized understanding of identification across ‘difference’.

Details

ISSN :
14664380 and 01417789
Volume :
100
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Feminist Review
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b598ec682cd54370c25dcf6de38d97a9
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1057/fr.2011.73