Compartir
Título
"There is no solid ground beneath us": The Shoals and Detours of Nalo Hopkinson's "The Glass Bottle Trick," "Precious," and "Greedy Choke Puppy"
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Caribbean Canadian
Nalo Hopkinson
intertextuality
fairy tales
folklore
soucouyant
self-creation
diaspora
Clasificación UNESCO
5101 Antropología Cultural
5701.07 Lengua y Literatura
Fecha de publicación
2022-10-10
Editor
Ediciones Universidad de Salamanca (España)
Citación
Gerber, L. (2022). “There is no solid ground beneath us”: The Shoals and Detours of Nalo Hopkinson’s “The Glass Bottle Trick,” “Precious,” and “Greedy Choke Puppy”. Canada and Beyond: A Journal of Canadian Literary and Cultural Studies, 10, 51–67. https://doi.org/10.14201/candb.v10i51-68
Resumen
[EN] This article presents a reading of Nalo Hopkinson's short stories "The Glass Bottle Trick," "Precious," and "Greedy Choke Puppy" that considers Caribbean Canadian subjectivity through lenses of (inter)textuality and the material/metaphorical spaces and movements of interruption. It draws from Tiffany Lethabo King's thinking on shoals to theorize the gathering and accumulation of tales that occurs in Hopkinson's re/imaginings of "Bluebeard," "The Kind and the Unkind Girls," and soucouyant folklore. The article suggests that these shoals interrupt the paths of dominant narratives in ways that force detours to emerge, adapting Rinaldo Walcott's use of the term to explore the transformative possibilities that occur through the creation of new improvised paths, of otherwise ways of conceptualizing Caribbean Canadian being. Ultimately, it proposes that Hopkinson's stories acknowledge and yet interrupt colonial narratives of geography, identity, and femininity, providing a framework through which to consider the unstable grounds and the searching detours of Caribbean Canadian subjectivities.
URI
ISSN
2254-1179
DOI
10.14201/candb.v10i51-68
Versión del editor
Aparece en las colecciones












