2021
DOI: 10.1177/2158244021997419
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Reterritorialization in A Small Place by Jamaica Kincaid: A Postcolonial Eco-Critical Study

Abstract: This article intends to understand how the postcolonial ecocritical writers attempt to reterritorialize their land, its history, and its culture by underscoring the hazards of tourism. In the wake of capitalism, tourism has increased environmental racism and environmental injustice encountered by people of marginalized communities. For this study, we have analyzed a creative nonfiction work A Small Place by Jamaica Kincaid in the light of postcolonial ecocritical theory presented by Donelle N. Dreese. This lit… Show more

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“…Either in her grandmother's experience in "the Trail of Tears" in 1830 or Lettie's heartbroken misfortune in the oil boom in 1920, land as the sufferer of the colonial and neo-colonial process, keeps witnessing and recovering the white colonizer's countless desires for natural resources that originally belong to the native people. Therefore, "[i]t proves that oppression of human resources has an intrinsic link with the exploitation of natural resources at the hand of the oppressor" [14] (p.7).…”
Section: Land Depleted By Capital Expansionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Either in her grandmother's experience in "the Trail of Tears" in 1830 or Lettie's heartbroken misfortune in the oil boom in 1920, land as the sufferer of the colonial and neo-colonial process, keeps witnessing and recovering the white colonizer's countless desires for natural resources that originally belong to the native people. Therefore, "[i]t proves that oppression of human resources has an intrinsic link with the exploitation of natural resources at the hand of the oppressor" [14] (p.7).…”
Section: Land Depleted By Capital Expansionmentioning
confidence: 99%