Akweke Emezi’s Dear Senthuran: Metaphysical Home(s) in Times of Globalisation
Keywords:
Emezi, home, postcolonial, Afropolitanism, liminalAbstract
This article aims to explore the liminal spaces portrayed in Akwaeke Emezi’s (they/them) memoir Dear Senthuran. In the current globalized world, mobility of African writers to the West has produced a literature that some critics label as “Afropolitanism”. Firstly, I trace the origin and implications of this term, which presents some issues that must be interrogated. Secondly, considering the example of other diaspora writers, I seek to analyze the territories in which Emezi imagines and creates their writings. I argue that these spaces, following Homi Bhabha’s postcolonial analysis of “Houses of Fiction”, act as locus communale, places in-between for the unhomely —the displaced, the refugees (political or social), the discriminated. Akwaeke Emezi identifies as a non-gendered God with multiple identities, an Igbo spirit who was “born to die”. Therefore, home is not perceived as a place of origin nor the place where they reside. Neither it is a place recreated from memories nor a place they observe and deploy in their writings. Instead, corporeal, fixed spaces are a form of delimitation and submission to the colonial discourses that Emezi tries to revert in their texts. Their queer identity does not fit into modern Nigerian society as it has lost touch with Igbo’s systems of values, their condition of black migrant does not allow them to feel at ease in the United States, and their godly identities surpass the physical need of belonging to a specific area. By denying the terrestrial links, they express their thirst to be in constant movement, in literal, continuous transformation. Thus, their existence is based in a flux, in liminal spaces, and by sharing their experience in the form of writing, they provide a safe refuge for those living in the cultural periphery.
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