London's Burning: Structuralist Readings of the Urban Inferno in the 1950's British Literature of Multi-culturalism
This article examines a literary triangle treating a modern re-imagining of the Dantean Inferno in Caribbean migrant experience. Sam Selvon’s The Lonely Londoners advanced a stylistic and intellectual revolution in post-World War II British literature, inspiring Colin MacInnes’ Absolute Beginners in...
Main Author: | Tadd Graham Fernée |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
New Bulgarian University
2020-12-01
|
Series: | English Studies at NBU |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://esnbu.org/data/files/2020/esnbu.20.2.6.pdf |
Similar Items
-
No Matter How Long the Night, the Day is Sure to Come: Differences, Diversity and Identities in Caribbean-British Poetry since 1945
by: Pavlína Flajšarová
Published: (2012-12-01) -
African by Exposure: Caregivers, Madness, and the Contagious Other in García Márquez’s Of Love and Other Demons and Rhys’s Wide Sargasso Sea
by: Meredith L. Harvey
Published: (2019-01-01) -
"Svolazza" Lucifero come le anime dei morti ? ("Inferno", XXXIV, 46-52)
by: Marco Chiariglione
Published: (2014-06-01) -
SAM SELVON’UN YALNIZ LONDRALILAR ESERİNDE YANSITILAN ALDATICI LONDRA KAVRAMI
by: Bülent Cercis Tanrıtanır, et al.
Published: (2018-09-01) -
Jean Rhys’s Tropographies: Unmappable Identity and the Tropical Landscape in Wide Sargasso Sea and Selected Short Fiction
by: Jessica Gildersleeve
Published: (2011-12-01)