Urban representations of african Nova Scotia: the reconquest of space in George Elliott Clarke's Red

  1. Eguíbar Holgado, Miasol 1
  1. 1 Universidad de Oviedo
    info

    Universidad de Oviedo

    Oviedo, España

    ROR https://ror.org/006gksa02

Revista:
Journal of English Studies

ISSN: 1576-6357

Año de publicación: 2013

Número: 11

Páginas: 83-96

Tipo: Artículo

DOI: 10.18172/JES.2618 DIALNET GOOGLE SCHOLAR lock_openDialnet editor

Otras publicaciones en: Journal of English Studies

Resumen

This paper explores a series of five poems from the collection Red (2011) by Nova Scotian writer George Elliott Clarke. It focuses on the central role that place, and more specifically, urban space, plays in the construction of the region he significantly renames �Africadia�, from the perspective of the black community. Although people of African descent have lived in the island since the seventeenth century �forming the vastest African community in Canada� this presence tends to be unacknowledged or deliberately erased �as is the case of the razing of the neighbourhood of Africville�. In these poems, Clarke vindicates this denied space, imbuing it with the lives and experiences of its Africadian inhabitants.

Referencias bibliográficas

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