“I AM DISAPPEARING/ INTO THE UNCERTAIN LIGHT”: LA PAROLA COME STRUMENTO DI CITTADINANZA E AUTODEFINIZIONE NELLE POESIE DI JACKIE KAY
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.12795/RICL.2014.i15.21Palabras clave:
Jackie Kay, identità, autobiografia, cittadinanza, nazionalità, razzaResumen
L’opera di Jackie Kay è un’esplorazione della materia intricata e complessa dell’identità. Al centro delle sue narrazioni spesso vi è un soggetto che non si può definire in base alle singole categorie di cittadinanza, nazionalità o razza. D’altronde, la stessa identità di Kay, così come emerge dalle sue opere dichiaratamente autobiografiche (la raccolta di versi The Adoption Papers e il racconto Red Dust Road) appare di non facile catalogazione: di origine afro-scozzese (nata a Edimburgo nel 1961 da madre scozzese e padre nigeriano), ed è cresciuta in un ambiente sociale tradizionale (a Glasgow) da genitori tutt’altro che tradizionali (è stata adottata da una coppia di bianchi pacifisti e comunisti radicali).
Abstract
Jackie Kay's work is an exploration of the intricate and complex matter of identity. At the center of his narratives there is often a subject that cannot be defined on the basis of individual categories of citizenship, nationality or race. On the other hand, the same identity of Kay, as it emerges from her admittedly autobiographical works (the collection of verses The Adoption Papers and the story Red Dust Road) appears not easy to catalog: of Afro-Scottish origin (born in Edinburgh in 1961 from a Scottish mother and a Nigerian father), and grew up in a traditional social environment (in Glasgow) from anything but traditional parents (she was adopted by a white pacifist and radical communist couple).
Descargas
Métricas
Citas
Broom, S., “‘My tongue is full of old ideas’: Race and Ethnicity. Benjamin Zephaniah, Jackie Kay, Moniza Alvi”, in S. Broom, Contemporary British and Irish Poetry, Palgrave Macmillan, Houndsmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire and New York, 2006, pp. 46-74.
Brown, M., “In/outside Scotland. Race and Citizenship in the Work of Jackie Kay”, in B. Schoene (a cura di), The Edinburgh Companion to Contemporary Scottish Literature, Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh, 2007, pp. 219-226.
Coppola, M. M., “Writing the Blues: Jackie Kay’s Intersemiotic Translations of Words and Music”, in Atti del XXVI Convegno AIA – Remediating, Rescripting, Remaking: Old and New Challenges in English Studies. Literature Workshop, Parma, 12 settembre 2013, in corso di pubblicazione.
Coppola, M. M., “‘Celtic-Afro.Caribbean…how kin ye be both?’: Jackie Kay’s Re-definitions of Identity”, in O. Palusci (a cura di), Postcolonial Studies: Changing Perceptions, Trento, Editrice Università degli Studi di Trento, 2006, pp. 287-297.
Curthoys, A., “Feminism, Citizenship and National Identity”, Feminist Review, 44 (Summer 1993), pp. 19-38.
Griffin, G., “In/Corporations? Jackie Kay’s The Adoption Papers”, in V. Bertram (a cura di), Kicking Daffodils. Twentieth-Century Women Poets, Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh, 1997, pp. 169-177.
Grȕnell, M. e Saharso, S., “State of the Art: bell hooks and Nira Yuval-Davis on Race, Ethnicity, Class and Gender”, European Journal of Women’s Studies, 6 (1999), pp. 203-218.
Kay, J., Fiere, London, Picador, 2011.
Kay, J., Red Dust Road. An Autobiographical Journey, London, Picador, 2010.
Kay, J., Bessie Smith, Bath, Somerset, Absolute Press, 1997.
Kay, J., Other Lovers, Highgreen, Bloodaxe Books, 1993.
Kay, J., “Kail and Callaloo” (1987), in S. Grewal, J. Kay, L. Landor, G. Lewis and P. Parmar (a cura di), Charting the Journey. Writings by Black and Third World Women, London, Sheba Feminist Publishers, 1988, p. 195.
Kay, J., The Adoption Papers and Other Poems, Highgreen, Bloodaxe Books, 1991.
Lister, R., “Citizenship: Toward a Feminist Synthesis”, Feminist Review, 57 (Autumn, 1997), pp. 28-48.
Lumsden, A., “Jackie Kay’s Poetry and Prose: Constructing Identity”, in A. Christianson and A. Lumsden (a cura di), Contemporary Scottish Women Writers, Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh, 2000, pp. 79-91.
Marinelli, S., “Tra pubblico e privato: slittamenti di frontiere nell’opera di Jackie Kay”, in M. Laforest (a cura di), Questi occhi non sono per piangere. Donne e spazi pubblici, Napoli, Liguori, 2006, pp. 19-25.
Marinelli, S., Corpografie femminili. Gli sconfinamenti della scrittura in tre autrici scozzesi, Napoli, Liguori, 2004.
Somerville-Arjar, G. e Wilson, R. E., “Jackie Kay”, in G. Somerville-Arjat and R. E. Wilson (a cura di), Sleeping with Monsters. Conversations with Scottish and Irish Women Poets, Polygon, Edinburgh, 1990, pp. 120-130.
Yuval-Davis, N., The Politics of Belonging. Intersectional Contestations, Los Angeles, London, New Delhi, Singapore, Washington DC, Sage, 2011.
Yuval-Davis, N., “Theorizing Identity: Beyond the ‘Us’ and ‘Them’ Dichotomy”, Patterns of Prejudice, 44, 3 (2010), pp. 261-280.
Yuval-Davis, N., “Women, Citizenship and Difference”, Feminist Review, 57 (Autumn, 1997), pp. 4-27.
Yuval-Davis, N., “Gender and Nation”, Ethnic and Racial Studies, 16, 4 (October 1993), pp. 621 632.
Descargas
Publicado
Cómo citar
Número
Sección
Aceptado 2019-01-10
Publicado 2014-04-09
- Resumen 112
- PDF 65