According to the social psychologists R. D. Laing, H. Phillipson and A. R. Lee, we human beings are constantly
speculating about the view that others have upon us, thereby forming a metaperspective (Laing
et al. 1966). Yet despite the fact that literature is grounded in some of the most fundamental and
general structures of human cognitive experience (Gavins and Steen 2003: 2), proving a
rich seam to mine for metaperspectives, the concept has not yet been explored in a literary context. Accordingly, this paper
adopts an interdisciplinary approach to investigate metaperspectives within fiction for the first time. Introduced is my coinage
of the racialised metaperspective, denoting a sub-type concerned with colour, culture, and/or ethnicity. Taking
as my literary case study Marlon James’ A Brief History of Seven Killings (2014), I demonstrate that the
racialised metaperspective both contributes to the depiction of a specific social milieu within a text, and serves a
characterising function.