From the diasporic to the transnation: Catherine Temma Davidson’s The Priest Fainted
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1515/aa-2016-0005Abstract
This paper analyses the depiction of the main female protagonists of Catherine Temma Davidson’s novel The Priest Fainted (1998) in the context of the symbolic formation of the hybrid identity of the main female character and narrator which is close to Bill Ascroft’s concept of the transnation. The author of this paper analyses Davidson’s depiction of three generations of female protagonists with a Greek cultural background and the way they symbolically represent the transition from a traditional diasporic identity (the narrator’s grandmother), through multicultural and transnational identity (her mother) up to the identity close to the concept of the transnation as defined by Bill Aschroft (the narrator herself). At the same time, the formation of such a cultural identity is understood as a symbolic formation of female independence and the rejection of a patriarchal society, religious bigotry and conservative values as represented, in the narrator’s and her mother’s view, by contemporary Greece.
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Copyright (c) 2016 Jaroslav Kušnír
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.