Fictions of Migration in Contemporary Britain and Ireland
Intro -- Acknowledgments -- Contents -- About the Author -- 1 Introduction: Migration, Mobility and the Redefinition of National Literatures in a Global Context -- A Sense of Order Amidst the Turbulence of Migration -- Migration and Changes to Constructs of National Identity -- Fictions of Migration in the Redefinition of National Literatures -- The Role of National Differences and Postcolonialism in the Emergence of Fictions of Migration -- Fictions of Migration and the Cosmopolitan Outlook -- Aim and Structure -- References -- 2 A Cosmopolitan Revision of the Postcolonial "Home" in Caryl Phillips's A Distant Shore and Foreigners -- Cosmopolitan Approaches to the Fissures and Fusions of Postcolonialism and Globalisation -- The Cosmopolitan Outlook of Unhomely Lives in Foreigners and A Distant Shore -- Conclusion -- References -- 3 From Exilic to Mobile Identities: Colum McCann's Let the Great World Spin and the Cosmopolitanisation of Irish Reality -- Changes in Migration and the Cosmopolitanisation of Literature -- Colum McCann's Cosmopolitanisation of the Irish Novel -- Dialogic Engagement with Post-9/11 Fiction -- The Transformation of National Reality by the "Average Migrant" -- Formal Connections with Fictions of the Global and the Irish Literature of Exile -- Conclusion -- References -- 4 "Memories of Lost Things": Narratives of Afropolitan Identity in Abdulrazak Gurnah's By the Sea and Gravel Heart -- In Pursuit of "a Little Kindness" in By the Sea -- "Unfit to Live or Die?": Figurative Imprisonment of the Afropolitan Migrant in Gravel Heart -- Conclusion -- References -- 5 Against the Fear of Complexity: Ethical and Aesthetic Engagement with De-racialising the Muslim Migrant in Elif Shafak's Honour -- Ethical Engagement: (Re)Envisioning the Muslim Migrant in the British Context and Honour.