"From a Distant Witness" in Rome and London: Black Atlantic Temporalities in William Demby's Beetlecreek and George Lamming's In the Castle of My Skin
- Creators
- Sherazi, Melanie
Abstract
Focusing on the formal methods of two modernist works of Cold War-era black Atlantic fiction, William Demby's Beetlecreek (1950) and George Lamming's In the Castle of My Skin (1953), the article examines the authors' respective positions of exile in Rome and London and choice to pen their debut, semi-autobiographical coming-of-age novels, set in the 1930s, with existential undertones—Demby's in a small segregated town in the Southern United States and Lamming's in a small colonial village in the Caribbean. Demby and Lamming use aesthetic modes of defamiliarization as a liberatory strategy, adopting modernist formal and temporal strategies to estrange structures of oppression. The essay argues for reading the authors' novels beyond national and canonical boundaries as part of a larger body of black Atlantic literature that deconstructs racialized regimes in the Global South. I conclude with a brief reading of each writer's intersections with Langston Hughes and Richard Wright, positing mobile networks of black diasporic affiliation forged in a period of global flux and transformation. This article compares two writers normally read only in distinct African American, Afro-Caribbean, and/or Black British contexts and calls attention to their shared priorities of black modernist innovation and politico-aesthetics.
Additional Information
© 2019 Johns Hopkins University Press and the University of Calgary.Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 92889
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20190213-134602435
- Created
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2019-02-13Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
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2021-11-16Created from EPrint's last_modified field