Intersectionality reading of Caribbean-American in-transit female narratives : Kincaid's Lucy and Nunez' Boundaries

While large bulk of recent scholarship has reflected growing attention to migration, there has been little focus on the evolving intersected marginalization and social inequalities of in-transit women in the host land. The present study addresses the evolving phenomena of intersectionality in the...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: PourAli, Soheyla, Eslamieh, Razieh, Chavoshian, Shohreh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia 2022
Online Access:http://journalarticle.ukm.my/18575/
http://journalarticle.ukm.my/18575/1/48600-178354-2-PB.pdf
_version_ 1848814609955291136
author PourAli, Soheyla
Eslamieh, Razieh
Chavoshian, Shohreh
author_facet PourAli, Soheyla
Eslamieh, Razieh
Chavoshian, Shohreh
author_sort PourAli, Soheyla
building UKM Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description While large bulk of recent scholarship has reflected growing attention to migration, there has been little focus on the evolving intersected marginalization and social inequalities of in-transit women in the host land. The present study addresses the evolving phenomena of intersectionality in the context of larger structures of racism, sexism, classism and the legacies of colonialism. Intersectionality refers to the interlocking oppression experience produced by the interaction of social, economic, political, cultural and racial factors. Intersectionality both as a concept and theory is to uncover the underlying interrelated and interconnected layers of dimensions including but not limited to race, class, gender, sex, ethnicity, age, nation and dis/ability which generate a distinct mode of oppression, subordination and inequality for an individual. In this study, the intersectionality related coined concept diaspora-intersectionality is presented to acknowledge the role of the overlapping interplay of interconnected factors in social exclusion, marginalization, class discrimination, genderization, and social locationality of diasporic female characters in the two Caribbean women writers' works: Jamaica Kincaid's Lucy (1987) and Elizabeth Nunez's Boundaries (2011).The authors have a number of themes in common, both Caribbean descent with hyphenated identity living alternately in the USA and the Caribbean. Their protagonists are also very similar; both immigrated to the West to earn professional experience and seek happiness. Both works abundantly overlap in portraying intransit Caribbean females whose positionings in the host land are hardly affected by intersectional patterns resulting to translocational marginality, class-conscious exclusion and social inequality. Thereby, intersectionality theory is beneficially opted to explore how diaspora context shapes marginalized shifting identities and how dominant power systems construct and neutralize social injustice and inequality for diasporic intersected individuals in the narratives.
first_indexed 2025-11-15T00:36:49Z
format Article
id oai:generic.eprints.org:18575
institution Universiti Kebangasaan Malaysia
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-15T00:36:49Z
publishDate 2022
publisher Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling oai:generic.eprints.org:185752022-05-11T07:14:21Z http://journalarticle.ukm.my/18575/ Intersectionality reading of Caribbean-American in-transit female narratives : Kincaid's Lucy and Nunez' Boundaries PourAli, Soheyla Eslamieh, Razieh Chavoshian, Shohreh While large bulk of recent scholarship has reflected growing attention to migration, there has been little focus on the evolving intersected marginalization and social inequalities of in-transit women in the host land. The present study addresses the evolving phenomena of intersectionality in the context of larger structures of racism, sexism, classism and the legacies of colonialism. Intersectionality refers to the interlocking oppression experience produced by the interaction of social, economic, political, cultural and racial factors. Intersectionality both as a concept and theory is to uncover the underlying interrelated and interconnected layers of dimensions including but not limited to race, class, gender, sex, ethnicity, age, nation and dis/ability which generate a distinct mode of oppression, subordination and inequality for an individual. In this study, the intersectionality related coined concept diaspora-intersectionality is presented to acknowledge the role of the overlapping interplay of interconnected factors in social exclusion, marginalization, class discrimination, genderization, and social locationality of diasporic female characters in the two Caribbean women writers' works: Jamaica Kincaid's Lucy (1987) and Elizabeth Nunez's Boundaries (2011).The authors have a number of themes in common, both Caribbean descent with hyphenated identity living alternately in the USA and the Caribbean. Their protagonists are also very similar; both immigrated to the West to earn professional experience and seek happiness. Both works abundantly overlap in portraying intransit Caribbean females whose positionings in the host land are hardly affected by intersectional patterns resulting to translocational marginality, class-conscious exclusion and social inequality. Thereby, intersectionality theory is beneficially opted to explore how diaspora context shapes marginalized shifting identities and how dominant power systems construct and neutralize social injustice and inequality for diasporic intersected individuals in the narratives. Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia 2022-02 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://journalarticle.ukm.my/18575/1/48600-178354-2-PB.pdf PourAli, Soheyla and Eslamieh, Razieh and Chavoshian, Shohreh (2022) Intersectionality reading of Caribbean-American in-transit female narratives : Kincaid's Lucy and Nunez' Boundaries. GEMA ; Online Journal of Language Studies, 22 (1). pp. 159-174. ISSN 1675-8021 https://ejournal.ukm.my/gema/issue/view/1467
spellingShingle PourAli, Soheyla
Eslamieh, Razieh
Chavoshian, Shohreh
Intersectionality reading of Caribbean-American in-transit female narratives : Kincaid's Lucy and Nunez' Boundaries
title Intersectionality reading of Caribbean-American in-transit female narratives : Kincaid's Lucy and Nunez' Boundaries
title_full Intersectionality reading of Caribbean-American in-transit female narratives : Kincaid's Lucy and Nunez' Boundaries
title_fullStr Intersectionality reading of Caribbean-American in-transit female narratives : Kincaid's Lucy and Nunez' Boundaries
title_full_unstemmed Intersectionality reading of Caribbean-American in-transit female narratives : Kincaid's Lucy and Nunez' Boundaries
title_short Intersectionality reading of Caribbean-American in-transit female narratives : Kincaid's Lucy and Nunez' Boundaries
title_sort intersectionality reading of caribbean-american in-transit female narratives : kincaid's lucy and nunez' boundaries
url http://journalarticle.ukm.my/18575/
http://journalarticle.ukm.my/18575/
http://journalarticle.ukm.my/18575/1/48600-178354-2-PB.pdf