English II
Wilkinson - Nature and Art
Barnard - Disgrace
Barris - Miscegenation, Desire, Rape
Kossew - Shame and Redemption
Eldridge - The Persistence of Romanticism
Transnational – A Definition
The term transnational, in its simplest guise, refers to the relations between citizens of different nation states, and the networks which link them. It also refers to the complex subjectivity of those who migrate. Scholars emphasise that transnationalism, because of heterogeneity and diversity, gives rise to a site for dynamic social and cultural change. At the same time, continuity is a necessary feature of this site. The co-existence of change and continuity (memory, the past, homeland) then is also a defining element of transnationalism. The tensions and struggles which arise from this paradox have a radical impact on the construction of subjectivities as represented in this literature. Thus the term Transnational comes to refer to not only the geographic multi-locationality of authors or characters, but also to their potential for subversion of national, ethnic and other cultural or political identities/affiliations (Naidu, S. Unpublished Doctoral Dissertation: 2006)


