Port Rupture(s) and Cross-Racial Kinships in Dionne Brand and Lee Maracle

Keywords:

Black Canadian Literature, Indigenous Literature, kinship, geography, affect theory

Abstract

 This paper examines Lee Maracle’s Talking to the Diaspora and Dionne Brand’s A Map to the Door of No Returnfor their respective responses to the Komagata Maru in 1914 and to the Chinese migrants denied entry in 1999. These literary moments are points of departure to examine the Indigenous, Black and Asian kinships that arise within and beyond the colonial policing of encounters. Indeed, Maracle and Brand reconceptualize migrant entry as entry into geographies of kinship rather than into the divisive geography of the port under the nation-state regime. The very site of Asian exclusion that constitutes a Canadian identity, the port, becomes a geographic modality through which racialized collectivities emerge from the possibilities of borderless entryways. 

Author Biography

Tavleen Purewal, University of Toronto
Tavleen Purewal is a Doctoral Candidate in the Department of English at the University of Toronto. She studies Black Canadian and Indigenous literatures and movements of resistance.

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Published
2019-12-20