Identity in and out of Time: Narratives of Temporal Displacement in Contemporary Migrant Fiction

dc.contributor.advisorDaiya, Kavita
dc.contributor.authorAlshammari, Raad
dc.date.accessioned2024-12-26T07:06:09Z
dc.date.issued2024
dc.description.abstractThis dissertation explores the role of time in contemporary migrant fiction, investigating the question of how representations of migrant temporality shape fictional narratives of displacement and deepen our understanding of “the age of migration.” Situated at the intersection of temporal turns in both migration studies and literary studies and informed by theories of postcolonial temporality, the dissertation analyzes six different works of postcolonial migrant fiction by major writers of multi-ethnic American and British multicultural literature. The analyzed texts all emphasize the temporal dimensions of migrant mobility, featuring a consciousness of temporal displacement that operates across both thematic and formal dimensions of the narrative. The dissertation seeks to illuminate how these texts negotiate the intricate relationship between displacement and temporality while articulating migrant experiences and identities in contemporary contexts. It argues that time plays a pivotal role in the literary production of meaning around individual and collective migrant identities, functioning across political, cultural, and aesthetic dimensions. Central to the dissertation’s argument is the idea that migrant movement in these works extends beyond a purely spatial journey. It represents a temporal movement that transgresses and redraws the temporal boundaries of both the self and the world as constructed by cultural, national, and global forms of hegemony. By emphasizing this temporalized understanding of mobility, the dissertation underscores a sense of agency and subjectivity that challenges the framing of migrant experiences within geographical narratives of time. It demonstrates how migrant temporalities enable a “cognitive remapping” of a world that is no longer anchored in fixed ideological teleologies but is instead shaped by the global interconnectedness of economies, cultures, and populations. In this context, the dissertation highlights the importance of recognizing the “in-betweenness” of migrant subjectivity as a form of temporal in-betweenness—one that not only captures the nuances of the migrant experience but also reflects the broader condition of global humanity. Here, the dissertation underlines the role of migrant literature as a distinctive space where the de- spatialized, in-between temporality of the migrant subject becomes tangible and representational.
dc.format.extent263
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14154/74441
dc.language.isoen_US
dc.publisherThe George Washington University
dc.subjectMigrant
dc.subjectFiction
dc.subjectTemporality
dc.subjectDisplacement
dc.subjectcontemporary
dc.titleIdentity in and out of Time: Narratives of Temporal Displacement in Contemporary Migrant Fiction
dc.typeThesis
sdl.degree.departmentEnglish Department
sdl.degree.disciplineLiterature
sdl.degree.grantorThe George Washington University
sdl.degree.nameDoctor of Philosophy

Files

Original bundle

Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
No Thumbnail Available
Name:
SACM-Dissertation.pdf
Size:
1.14 MB
Format:
Adobe Portable Document Format

License bundle

Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
No Thumbnail Available
Name:
license.txt
Size:
1.61 KB
Format:
Item-specific license agreed to upon submission
Description:

Copyright owned by the Saudi Digital Library (SDL) © 2024