Reclaiming the Margins: A Postcolonial Reading of An Island by Karen Jennings

Abstract        The present research investigates a postcolonial reading of Karen Jennings' An Island, drawing on Homi K. Bhabha's theoretical concepts of hybridity, identity, and the Third Space to examine how the novel reflects the psychological and political consequences of colonialis...

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Main Authors: Abbas Abbood, Abbas Salim
Format: Article
Language:Arabic
Published: College of Arts / University of Thi Qar 2025-06-01
Series:مجلة اداب ذي قار
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Online Access:https://jart.utq.edu.iq/index.php/main/article/view/830
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author Abbas Abbood
Abbas Salim
author_facet Abbas Abbood
Abbas Salim
author_sort Abbas Abbood
collection DOAJ
description Abstract        The present research investigates a postcolonial reading of Karen Jennings' An Island, drawing on Homi K. Bhabha's theoretical concepts of hybridity, identity, and the Third Space to examine how the novel reflects the psychological and political consequences of colonialism, displacement, and failed nationhood. Set on a secluded island inhabited by Samuel, an aged lighthouse keeper, the story explores the junction of solitude, memory, and historical trauma. Samuel, a former political prisoner who survived both colonial and postcolonial administrations, exemplifies a fractured identity produced by violence, treachery, and solitude. When a nameless refugee shows up, the story takes a radical turn because Samuel's manufactured sense of identity and ownership is upended by his silent presence. In addition to being a physical location, the island also functions as a liminal Third Space—a location of cultural negotiation, memory, and hybridization—where this meeting takes place. Jennings criticizes the inability of the postcolonial state to address the inherited systems of marginalization and exclusion using layers of symbolism and simple writing. According to this research , Jennings employs the island's landscape—its deteriorating colonial lighthouse, hybrid vegetation, and changing shoreline—as metaphors for the continual balancing act between the past and present as well as the instability of national identity. Bhabha's concept of hybridity, in which fixed identities disintegrate in favor of multifaceted, conflicted subjectivities, is reflected in Samuel's mental decline and his blending with the refugee. Additionally, by giving nonverbal communication, silence, and fragmented recollection precedence over formal discourse, the novel questions prevailing historical narratives. An Island emphasizes the moral and affective aspects of postcolonial life in this way. In the end, the book highlights the underlying conflicts between self and other, remembering and forgetting, exile and belonging, and challenges readers to face the lingering effects of colonial dominance in modern societies.
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spelling doaj-art-3ddfbb81b9f14b51a2736f4907c2739e2025-08-03T22:25:44ZaraCollege of Arts / University of Thi Qarمجلة اداب ذي قار2073-65842709-796X2025-06-0135010.32792/tqartj.v3i50.830Reclaiming the Margins: A Postcolonial Reading of An Island by Karen JenningsAbbas Abbood0https://orcid.org/0009-0001-6543-4032Abbas Salim1https://orcid.org/0009-0005-7007-5491Directorate-General for Education Dhi QarDirectorate-General for Education Dhi QarAbstract        The present research investigates a postcolonial reading of Karen Jennings' An Island, drawing on Homi K. Bhabha's theoretical concepts of hybridity, identity, and the Third Space to examine how the novel reflects the psychological and political consequences of colonialism, displacement, and failed nationhood. Set on a secluded island inhabited by Samuel, an aged lighthouse keeper, the story explores the junction of solitude, memory, and historical trauma. Samuel, a former political prisoner who survived both colonial and postcolonial administrations, exemplifies a fractured identity produced by violence, treachery, and solitude. When a nameless refugee shows up, the story takes a radical turn because Samuel's manufactured sense of identity and ownership is upended by his silent presence. In addition to being a physical location, the island also functions as a liminal Third Space—a location of cultural negotiation, memory, and hybridization—where this meeting takes place. Jennings criticizes the inability of the postcolonial state to address the inherited systems of marginalization and exclusion using layers of symbolism and simple writing. According to this research , Jennings employs the island's landscape—its deteriorating colonial lighthouse, hybrid vegetation, and changing shoreline—as metaphors for the continual balancing act between the past and present as well as the instability of national identity. Bhabha's concept of hybridity, in which fixed identities disintegrate in favor of multifaceted, conflicted subjectivities, is reflected in Samuel's mental decline and his blending with the refugee. Additionally, by giving nonverbal communication, silence, and fragmented recollection precedence over formal discourse, the novel questions prevailing historical narratives. An Island emphasizes the moral and affective aspects of postcolonial life in this way. In the end, the book highlights the underlying conflicts between self and other, remembering and forgetting, exile and belonging, and challenges readers to face the lingering effects of colonial dominance in modern societies. https://jart.utq.edu.iq/index.php/main/article/view/830postcolonialism, Homi Bhabha, hybridity, identity, Third Space, An Island, Karen Jennings
spellingShingle Abbas Abbood
Abbas Salim
Reclaiming the Margins: A Postcolonial Reading of An Island by Karen Jennings
مجلة اداب ذي قار
postcolonialism, Homi Bhabha, hybridity, identity, Third Space, An Island, Karen Jennings
title Reclaiming the Margins: A Postcolonial Reading of An Island by Karen Jennings
title_full Reclaiming the Margins: A Postcolonial Reading of An Island by Karen Jennings
title_fullStr Reclaiming the Margins: A Postcolonial Reading of An Island by Karen Jennings
title_full_unstemmed Reclaiming the Margins: A Postcolonial Reading of An Island by Karen Jennings
title_short Reclaiming the Margins: A Postcolonial Reading of An Island by Karen Jennings
title_sort reclaiming the margins a postcolonial reading of an island by karen jennings
topic postcolonialism, Homi Bhabha, hybridity, identity, Third Space, An Island, Karen Jennings
url https://jart.utq.edu.iq/index.php/main/article/view/830
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