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'Broken-Off Like Limbs from a Tree': Fractured Identity in Caryl Phillips's 'Crossing the River (1993)'

Authors :
Labidi, Abid Larbi
Source :
Advances in Language and Literary Studies. Aug 2016 7(4):132-138.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

My major purpose in studying Caryl Phillips's widely acclaimed novel "Crossing the River" is to examine, through a close textual analysis, the severe identity crisis inflicted upon slaves under the three-century long slavery institution. I explore how slaves' tragic rift of separation from their African homelands led to a disastrous loss of identity. I particularly call attention to the ways slavery profoundly "shattered" such identity-shaping factors as home, family, belonging, memory and roots. Quite curiously, this identity destruction was not only undergone by African slaves who experienced The Middle Passage firsthand, but has been "transmitted" to their descendants in the contemporary realities of the black diaspora. I, therefore, look into the historical and psychic continuum that binds the slaves' experience of home loss with their descendants' exilic identity and space impermanence. Central to this paper is also the exploration of how the slaves' identity fracture is reflected at the level of the language, narrative forms, genre mixing, and the temporal and spatial fragmentation Phillips freely experiments with in his narrative.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2203-4714
Volume :
7
Issue :
4
Database :
ERIC
Journal :
Advances in Language and Literary Studies
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
EJ1127281
Document Type :
Journal Articles<br />Reports - Evaluative