‘Headed Home’: Glissant, Bhabha and the politics of homecoming in Walcott’s Omeros and The Odyssey / Haleh Zargarzadeh

This thesis examines representations of home and homecoming in Derek Walcott’s Omeros (1990) and The Odyssey: A Stage Version (1993). The quest for home and at-homeness has been identified as a primary motif in contemporary literature in English. Within conventional scholarship, home or “nostos,” ho...

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Main Author: Haleh, Zargarzadeh
Format: Thesis
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/5938/
http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/5938/4/haleh.pdf
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author Haleh, Zargarzadeh
author_facet Haleh, Zargarzadeh
author_sort Haleh, Zargarzadeh
building UM Research Repository
collection Online Access
description This thesis examines representations of home and homecoming in Derek Walcott’s Omeros (1990) and The Odyssey: A Stage Version (1993). The quest for home and at-homeness has been identified as a primary motif in contemporary literature in English. Within conventional scholarship, home or “nostos,” homecoming, is usually associated with genealogy and geography; it is also traditionally defined in terms of homogeneity. In this study, I demonstrate how the postcolonial imaginings of Walcott’s Homeric-inspired texts dismantle such fixed and unitary understandings of home. I show how these works reject notions of linearity and purity to construct a model of home and homecoming that recognizes and affirms multiplicity and displacement. This postcolonial paradigm of home, I argue, is more attuned to the realities of diaspora, the specificities of Caribbean identity, and the distinctive contours of its colonial history and experience. Toward this end, the study’s four chapters examine the concept of home and homecoming from various perspectives, each framed and informed by Édouard Glissant’s theoretical notions of “opacity,” “relation,” “creolization,” “detour,” and “verbal delirium,” and Homi Bhabha’s concept of the “unhomely.” In reading the trope of “nostos” through these postcolonial concepts, this study moves away from a purely classicist approach to argue that home, for Walcott, invokes both the pleasures of familiarity and the terrors and ambivalences of unhomeliness.
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spelling um-59382022-03-21T23:20:33Z ‘Headed Home’: Glissant, Bhabha and the politics of homecoming in Walcott’s Omeros and The Odyssey / Haleh Zargarzadeh Haleh, Zargarzadeh PE English PR English literature This thesis examines representations of home and homecoming in Derek Walcott’s Omeros (1990) and The Odyssey: A Stage Version (1993). The quest for home and at-homeness has been identified as a primary motif in contemporary literature in English. Within conventional scholarship, home or “nostos,” homecoming, is usually associated with genealogy and geography; it is also traditionally defined in terms of homogeneity. In this study, I demonstrate how the postcolonial imaginings of Walcott’s Homeric-inspired texts dismantle such fixed and unitary understandings of home. I show how these works reject notions of linearity and purity to construct a model of home and homecoming that recognizes and affirms multiplicity and displacement. This postcolonial paradigm of home, I argue, is more attuned to the realities of diaspora, the specificities of Caribbean identity, and the distinctive contours of its colonial history and experience. Toward this end, the study’s four chapters examine the concept of home and homecoming from various perspectives, each framed and informed by Édouard Glissant’s theoretical notions of “opacity,” “relation,” “creolization,” “detour,” and “verbal delirium,” and Homi Bhabha’s concept of the “unhomely.” In reading the trope of “nostos” through these postcolonial concepts, this study moves away from a purely classicist approach to argue that home, for Walcott, invokes both the pleasures of familiarity and the terrors and ambivalences of unhomeliness. 2015 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/5938/4/haleh.pdf Haleh, Zargarzadeh (2015) ‘Headed Home’: Glissant, Bhabha and the politics of homecoming in Walcott’s Omeros and The Odyssey / Haleh Zargarzadeh. PhD thesis, Universiti Malaya. http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/5938/
spellingShingle PE English
PR English literature
Haleh, Zargarzadeh
‘Headed Home’: Glissant, Bhabha and the politics of homecoming in Walcott’s Omeros and The Odyssey / Haleh Zargarzadeh
title ‘Headed Home’: Glissant, Bhabha and the politics of homecoming in Walcott’s Omeros and The Odyssey / Haleh Zargarzadeh
title_full ‘Headed Home’: Glissant, Bhabha and the politics of homecoming in Walcott’s Omeros and The Odyssey / Haleh Zargarzadeh
title_fullStr ‘Headed Home’: Glissant, Bhabha and the politics of homecoming in Walcott’s Omeros and The Odyssey / Haleh Zargarzadeh
title_full_unstemmed ‘Headed Home’: Glissant, Bhabha and the politics of homecoming in Walcott’s Omeros and The Odyssey / Haleh Zargarzadeh
title_short ‘Headed Home’: Glissant, Bhabha and the politics of homecoming in Walcott’s Omeros and The Odyssey / Haleh Zargarzadeh
title_sort ‘headed home’: glissant, bhabha and the politics of homecoming in walcott’s omeros and the odyssey / haleh zargarzadeh
topic PE English
PR English literature
url http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/5938/
http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/5938/4/haleh.pdf