Challenging the national border system through love in César Mba A. Abogo’s “The Thickness of the Night” and Lien Carrazana’s “An Expatriate Waitress, Anywhere in the World”
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Published:2022-09-02
Issue:13
Volume:
Page:165-185
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ISSN:1989-7383
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Container-title:Castilla. Estudios de Literatura
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language:
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Short-container-title:CEL
Author:
Fuentes Antrás FranciscoORCID
Abstract
The short stories “En la espesura de la noche” (2010) and “Una camarera (expatriada a cualquier lugar del mundo)” (2011) depict the feeling of imprisonment that first-person narrators experience within the rigid borders of Equatorial Guinea and Cuba, respectively, and how they overcome this territorial oppression by loving a woman who dwells beyond the national borders they are unable to trespass. Bearing in mind that the love towards nation-states constitutes a way of perpetuating a nationalist ideology and the reinforcement of national borders over individual free agency (Morrison et al., 2021: 514), this article examines how, in both narratives, the exaltation of a transnational love over that of the nation challenges these nation-state’s “unique discourse,” based on the binary border thinking of inside/outside and us/them, in favor of individual agency and a more transnational way of understanding the world.
Publisher
Universidad de Valladolid
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory