Identity Wanderings between Isolation and Closeness in Postcolonial Women’s Writings
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University of Tlemcen
Abstract
Fragmentation and connexion are prevalent themes in this paper. It is from this basis
that this research attempts at providing an in-depth analysis of the selected Haitian short
story cycle of Edwidge Danticat’s The Dew Breaker (2004). In this respect, the reader will
figure out the way characters deal with sequels of alienation and attempts to belonging,
since the diasporic divide and the awareness of being alienated are major effects of
migration and migrated people. From this standpoint, the research argues for a closer look
at the narrative form that sheds light on people’s migration away from trauma of being
killed, as in the case of the short story cycle. In bringing this vision into fruition, how can
an alienated identity manage to belong in a new society? Could one’s identity remain
steady while seeking refuge? Does this divide cause rifts over the self? The point is that the
selected short stories from the novel are testimonies of Diaspora, thus, the analysis falls
onto the untold upheavals that sway one’s identity in the journey of mourning and healing.
As the title of the research paper suggests, and being faithful to the scope of
postcolonialism, circumstances of marginalization are dealt with through characters, and
investigating themes of alienation, belonging, nostalgia and Diaspora which connote the
connection and disconnection between land and characters.
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