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Dwelling places

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Explores some of the key venues of black British literary and cultural production across the postwar period: bedsits and basements; streets and cafes; train stations and tourist landscapes; the su...
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  • 31 July 2003
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Explores some of the key venues of black British literary and cultural production across the postwar period: bedsits and basements; streets and cafes; train stations and tourist landscapes; the suburbs and the city; the north and south. Pursues a 'devolving' landscape in order to consider what an analysis of 'dwelling' might contribute to the travelling theories of diaspora discourse and asks what happens when we 'situate' literatures of movement and migration. Offers fresh readings of work by some of the key literary figures of the postwar years, for example, Salman Rushdie, Hanif Kureishi, Meera Syal, Linton Kwesi Johnson. Contextualises writings alongside photography, painting, and film to consider their relationship to broader shifts in the politics of black representation over the past fifty years. Offers sustained anaysis of many of the texts reproduced in Procter's anthology Writing black Britain 1948-98 ( MUP, 2000) making an ideal companion to the earlier book.
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Price: £25.00
Pages: 232
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Publication Date: 31 July 2003
ISBN: 9780719060540
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

LITERARY CRITICISM / American / African American & Black, Literature: history and criticism, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Black Studies (Global), Ethnic studies

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James Procter is Lecturer in English Studies at the University of Stirling

List of illustrations
1. General Introduction
I) Devolving black Britain
ii) 'Black': A brief British history
iii) Dwelling and diaspora

2. Dwelling places
I) Introduction: The 'open door' and the domestic threshold
ii) Descending the stairwell
iii) Lyons at the circus
iv) A 'little land' in London: The gate, the arch and the water
v) Conclusion:'A place to retire to…..'

3. The street
I) Introduction
ii) From basement to pavement
iii) Off-street locations: The Mangrove Restaurant
iv) Rioting and writing: The street and representation
v) Touring the city: The black British flaneur
vi) 'Doun de road' : Bluefootedness
vii) Brick Lane
viii) Conclusion: Yellowbricklane

4. Suburbia
I) Introduction: The suburban border
ii) Ordinariness, discrepant cosmopolitanism and the Singhs
iii) The Black Country, Birmingham and 'Anita and Me'
iv) Refurbishing suburbia
v) Conclusion: 'here and there…'

5. The North
I) Introduction: 'Another country…'
ii) Black Britain beyond the centre
iii) Bradford, the Rushdie affair and the re-imagination of landscape
iv) Bradford and the tourist landscape
v) Travelling north: Writing an English journey
vi) Conclusion: 'Here'
6. Conclusion: Train stations and travel bags