Diaspora, Space and Identity Production: The Predicament of Belonging in Andrea Levy’s Small Island
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Faculty of Letters and Foreign Languages Department of English
Abstract
The vast territories that the British Empire once colonized resulted in a fiction that reflects
specific groups of minorities within the British society known as Contemporary Black
British Literature. It can be defined as the literature introduced in English by authors who
originate from the former British colonies analogous African, Asian, and Caribbean
regions. This research paper represents a closer examination of particular problematic
issues that are dealt with in Contemporary Black British Literature, namely diaspora and
cultural dislocation, space and identity production. It investigates the dilemmas of
representation of Caribbean Diaspora living in the metropolitan city of London. This study
examines the effects of changing places on the process of ‘space and identity production’.
Andrea Levy’s Small Island (2004), portray hybrid characters who are seeking a sense of
belonging. The struggle of Levy’s characters to find their own spaces and identities in the
post-war London is studied according to the theory of diasporic space and diasporic
identity to illustrate the possibility of the existence of produced diasporic space where all
these characters can express and celebrate their hybrid identities.