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LONDON'S BURNING: STRUCTURALIST READINGS OF THE URBAN INFERNO IN THE 1950'S BRITISH LITERATURE OF MULTI-CULTURALISM

Vol.6, Issue 2, 2020, pp. 265-294 Full text

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DOI: https://doi.org/10.33919/esnbu.20.2.6
Web of Science: 000607561000007

Author:
Tadd Graham Fernée https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4364-3463

Affiliation: New Bulgarian University, Sofia, Bulgaria

Abstract
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 the founding literary texts of contemporary British multi-cultural society. It followed the template of Jean Rhys Voyage in the Dark. We must read these complex texts to understand the conflicted multi-cultural society that Britain has become today: they deal with identity and solidarity, atomisation and commodification, Empire and capitalism, while throwing light on the most recent advances in historical and theoretical scholarship by pioneers such as Olivette Otele and Reni Eddo-Lodge. Moreover, these texts throw new light on unanswered Structuralist and Post-Structuralist debates from Emile Durkheim to Martin Heidegger. This article examines the intersectionality of class, gender and race within both the national British framework of post-war capitalism and the wider colonial heritage of slavery and forced labour, highlighting voices who articulated an ideal of multi-cultural humanism that remains crucial today.

Keywords: Windrush generation, post-colonial literature, Sam Selvon, Ian MacInnes, Jean Rhys, Structuralism, Black history, gender, multi-culturalism, British Literature, Dante, capitalism, Caribbean literature, cultural studies, Stuart Hall

Article history:
Submitted: 27 November 2020;
Reviewed:17 December 2020;
Accepted: 18 December 2020;
Published: 21 December 2020

Citation (APA):
Fernée, T.G. (2020). London's Burning: Structuralist Readings of the Urban Inferno in the 1950's British Literature of Multi-culturalism. English Studies at NBU, 6(2), 265-294. https://doi.org/10.33919/esnbu.20.2.6

Copyright © 2020 Tadd Graham Fernée

This open access article is published and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0), which permits non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. If you want to use the work commercially, you must first get the authors' permission.

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Review

1. Reviewer's name: Undisclosed
Review Content: Undisclosed
Review Verified on Publons

2. Reviewer's name: Undisclosed
Review Content: Undisclosed
Review Verified on Publons

Handling Editor: Stan Bogdanov, PhD, New Bulgarian University
Verified Editor Record on Publons


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