"An Imaginary Black Family": Jazz, Diaspora, and the Construction of Scottish Blackness in Jackie Kay's Trumpet.

£6.99

Symbiosis, 8.2 191—202
Author: Carole Jones
14 Pages

This essay, originally published in Symbiosis: A Journal of Anglo-American Literary Relations, explores the themes of identity, race, and diaspora in Jackie Kay’s novel Trumpet. Carole Jones analyzes how Kay constructs a black Scottish identity through the lens of jazz music and African-American cultural elements. The essay examines the intersections of race, gender, and sexuality in Kay’s work, and how these aspects contribute to a broader understanding of blackness within a Scottish context. This analysis is essential for readers interested in contemporary Scottish literature and its engagement with multiculturalism.

Add To Cart

Symbiosis, 8.2 191—202
Author: Carole Jones
14 Pages

This essay, originally published in Symbiosis: A Journal of Anglo-American Literary Relations, explores the themes of identity, race, and diaspora in Jackie Kay’s novel Trumpet. Carole Jones analyzes how Kay constructs a black Scottish identity through the lens of jazz music and African-American cultural elements. The essay examines the intersections of race, gender, and sexuality in Kay’s work, and how these aspects contribute to a broader understanding of blackness within a Scottish context. This analysis is essential for readers interested in contemporary Scottish literature and its engagement with multiculturalism.

Symbiosis, 8.2 191—202
Author: Carole Jones
14 Pages

This essay, originally published in Symbiosis: A Journal of Anglo-American Literary Relations, explores the themes of identity, race, and diaspora in Jackie Kay’s novel Trumpet. Carole Jones analyzes how Kay constructs a black Scottish identity through the lens of jazz music and African-American cultural elements. The essay examines the intersections of race, gender, and sexuality in Kay’s work, and how these aspects contribute to a broader understanding of blackness within a Scottish context. This analysis is essential for readers interested in contemporary Scottish literature and its engagement with multiculturalism.

Secured by PayPal
Powered by Stripe - blurple.png

Our best-selling short essay was first published in Symbiosis: a Journal of Anglo-American Literary Relations

"Recognized by My Trumpet": Celebrity and/as Disability in Harriet Martineaus Transatlantic Tour
£6.99
‘This Excellent and Spiritual Traffick’: Producing and Promoting Indian Souls in Seventeenth-Century New England
£6.99
Emily Dickinson (and Walt Whitman): The Escape from Locksley Hall Symbiosis 7.1 56-75
£6.99
"An Extraordinary Species of Tyranny": Fanny Trollope Domestic Manners of the Americans Symbiosis 5.1 17-32
£6.99
Inducting Pocohontas
£6.99

Produced by Academics

Serving Academics

Fullyfuelled-payments-logo.png
PayPal Logo

Partners

POD (Print On Demand)
Technology Partners

*Google Play and the Google Play logo are trademarks of Google LLC.

Humanities-ebooks LLP Logo.png
Humanities E-Books LLP

 ©2024 Copyright Humanities Ebooks LLP. All Rights Reserved.
124 City Rd, London EC1V 2NX
Partnership No. OC324877
Registered in England and Wales