New Trajectories in Postcolonial Narratives: The Predicament of the Immigrant in the Host Country in Laila Lalami’s The Other Americans

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Hamid Issafi

Abstract

During the last few decades Postcolonial studies have evolved to a considerable extent. The abundance of Postcolonial writings and rising polemical debates among Postcolonial writers, scholars and critics are benchmarks that marked the evolvement of Postcolo-nialism in the realm of intelligentsia. Among the most prominent and innovative key-figures of Postcolonial and diaspora writers is Laila Lalami. This paper seeks to explore new routings in Postco-lonial writings. Therefore, the dynamic shift from locality to cosmo-politanism inscribed within Laila Lalami’s The Other Americans (2019) will be discussed. How the migrant’s moving identity is manifested in the Western host country through the prism of the Self and Other dynamics will be given much emphasis. Methodo-logically speaking, Mikhail Bakhtin’s dialogism will be used as a tool to discuss the polyphony of the novel; by the same token, this study draws upon Postcolonial theory; concepts such as displacement, moving identities, and Homi Bhabha’s third space will be used as tools of analysis.

Keywords:
The Other Americans, Postcolonialism, Polyphony, Third Space, Identity
Published: Nov 1, 2024

Article Details

Section
Texts and Visions Across Genres and Media: Re – thinking Arab Cultural History