Sexuality, race and empire in Alan Hollinghurst's "A Thieving Boy" (1983)

By returning to the very start of Alan Hollinghurst’s literary career, this article begins constructing a different narrative about this “gay” British author -- one in which sexuality, race, and empire are intimately connected, and in which sexual liberation is haunted by imperial histories of racia...

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Main Author: Dodson, E
Format: Journal article
Published: Taylor and Francis 2016
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author Dodson, E
author_facet Dodson, E
author_sort Dodson, E
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description By returning to the very start of Alan Hollinghurst’s literary career, this article begins constructing a different narrative about this “gay” British author -- one in which sexuality, race, and empire are intimately connected, and in which sexual liberation is haunted by imperial histories of racial exploitation. Through a “contrapuntal” analysis of his 1983 Egyptian short story “A Thieving Boy”, the article complicates dominant “queer” interpretations which overlook the postimperial politics – the aesthetic negotiation of Britain after empire – at stake in his representations of race and nation. In particular, through a dialogue with Hollinghurst’s non-fiction, it interrogates the political ambiguity of the story’s postimperial rewriting of E.M. Forster’s (homo)sexual awakening. It concludes by exploring the implications of this rereading for conventional conceptions of “postcolonial” and “British” contemporary fiction.
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spelling oxford-uuid:a5e3d901-81fb-4154-b3f7-b46d443d3f342022-03-27T02:43:34ZSexuality, race and empire in Alan Hollinghurst's "A Thieving Boy" (1983)Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:a5e3d901-81fb-4154-b3f7-b46d443d3f34Symplectic Elements at OxfordTaylor and Francis2016Dodson, EBy returning to the very start of Alan Hollinghurst’s literary career, this article begins constructing a different narrative about this “gay” British author -- one in which sexuality, race, and empire are intimately connected, and in which sexual liberation is haunted by imperial histories of racial exploitation. Through a “contrapuntal” analysis of his 1983 Egyptian short story “A Thieving Boy”, the article complicates dominant “queer” interpretations which overlook the postimperial politics – the aesthetic negotiation of Britain after empire – at stake in his representations of race and nation. In particular, through a dialogue with Hollinghurst’s non-fiction, it interrogates the political ambiguity of the story’s postimperial rewriting of E.M. Forster’s (homo)sexual awakening. It concludes by exploring the implications of this rereading for conventional conceptions of “postcolonial” and “British” contemporary fiction.
spellingShingle Dodson, E
Sexuality, race and empire in Alan Hollinghurst's "A Thieving Boy" (1983)
title Sexuality, race and empire in Alan Hollinghurst's "A Thieving Boy" (1983)
title_full Sexuality, race and empire in Alan Hollinghurst's "A Thieving Boy" (1983)
title_fullStr Sexuality, race and empire in Alan Hollinghurst's "A Thieving Boy" (1983)
title_full_unstemmed Sexuality, race and empire in Alan Hollinghurst's "A Thieving Boy" (1983)
title_short Sexuality, race and empire in Alan Hollinghurst's "A Thieving Boy" (1983)
title_sort sexuality race and empire in alan hollinghurst s a thieving boy 1983
work_keys_str_mv AT dodsone sexualityraceandempireinalanhollinghurstsathievingboy1983