"Funny, but no hybrid": H.D., Tea and Expatriate Identity
Symbiosis 13.2
Author: Bryony Randall
Pages: 22
Bryony Randall's essay "‘Funny, but no hybrid’: H.D., Tea and Expatriate Identity" explores the role of tea in the life and work of Hilda Doolittle (H.D.), an American expatriate poet. The essay delves into how tea-drinking rituals reflect H.D.'s complex relationship with her American and British identities, and how these rituals intersect with themes of gender and creativity. Randall provides a nuanced analysis of H.D.'s autobiographical novels, illustrating the ambivalence of expatriate identity through the seemingly mundane act of taking tea.
Symbiosis 13.2
Author: Bryony Randall
Pages: 22
Bryony Randall's essay "‘Funny, but no hybrid’: H.D., Tea and Expatriate Identity" explores the role of tea in the life and work of Hilda Doolittle (H.D.), an American expatriate poet. The essay delves into how tea-drinking rituals reflect H.D.'s complex relationship with her American and British identities, and how these rituals intersect with themes of gender and creativity. Randall provides a nuanced analysis of H.D.'s autobiographical novels, illustrating the ambivalence of expatriate identity through the seemingly mundane act of taking tea.
Symbiosis 13.2
Author: Bryony Randall
Pages: 22
Bryony Randall's essay "‘Funny, but no hybrid’: H.D., Tea and Expatriate Identity" explores the role of tea in the life and work of Hilda Doolittle (H.D.), an American expatriate poet. The essay delves into how tea-drinking rituals reflect H.D.'s complex relationship with her American and British identities, and how these rituals intersect with themes of gender and creativity. Randall provides a nuanced analysis of H.D.'s autobiographical novels, illustrating the ambivalence of expatriate identity through the seemingly mundane act of taking tea.