"LEVY’S FRUIT OF THE LEMON" (1999) AND THE CONSTRUCTION OF IDENTITY


Autoria(s): Bonnici, Thomas
Data(s)

01/01/2000

Resumo

The slave-system, with extant repercussions on contemporary society, is accountable for the globalized exclusion scheme not only in the ex-colonies but even in the former metropolises. Official History is subverted by re-narrating what happened to non-Europeans during the last five hundred years and in Fruit of the Lemon black British author Andrea Levy utilizes orature to trigger the subjectification process in Faith Jackson, a British-born black female whose parents hail from Jamaica. Orature involve the construction of a new subject through revelations on the daily struggle for work, friendship, community-building, racial inclusion and the dire facts of the Caribbean diaspora. Since transindividual social tensions affect the British black subject, native or immigrant, the novel denounces the immigrants’ “amnesia” as a policy and the myth of a British multicultural society accepting peacefully ex-colonial subjects. Results show that remembrance through orature is a powerful means of subjectification and identity, besides being an antidote against a racialized society. In Fruit of the Lemon Levy installs an agonistic stance in which the authority of hegemonic discourse is subverted and a new liberating and hybridized discourse produced.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

https://e-revista.unioeste.br/index.php/linguaseletras/article/view/2258

10.5935/rl&l.v10i18.2258

Idioma(s)

por

Publicador

Universidade Estadual do Oeste do Paraná

Relação

https://e-revista.unioeste.br/index.php/linguaseletras/article/view/2258/1751

Fonte

Línguas & Letras; v. 10 n. 18 (2009); p. 187-212

1981-4755

1517-7238

Palavras-Chave #Fruit of the Lemon #British Black Literature #Orature #Identity #Remembrance #Subversion.
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion