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2015 | 7 | 1 | 83-94

Article title

The Image of the East-Central European in Rose Tremain’s The Road Home

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
In Rose Tremain’s The Road Home, the culture clash of the British and the East-Central European is portrayed through a complex symbolism centred on images of food, consumption and waste. This literary representation may shed light on British literary auto-images, as well as hetero-images of the Eastern European immigrant. The novel’s presentation of this culture shock is defined by the cultural historical and economic circumstances of the parties. Food and material provide the symbolic sphere where the relationship between Britain and East-Central Europe is characterized in terms of capitalist worldview as opposed to a post-communist existence. William Shakespeare’s Hamlet is the most important intertext for Tremain’s novel. Hamlet is obsessed with the vulnerability of material in light of the spiritual value attached to it in the form of human soul. Stephen Greenblatt’s ideas on food, waste and the Christian belief in divine existence residing in material objects - ideas that originate in early modern times - shed light on the motif of material and food in The Road Home. Seen through the symbolism of food and the idea of differing values being attached to matter, the narrative identity of Lev, the protagonist of Tremain’s work, experiences drastic change due to his encounter with the capitalist, British ‘other’.

Publisher

Year

Volume

7

Issue

1

Pages

83-94

Physical description

Dates

published
2015-12-01
online
2015-12-30

Contributors

  • Eötvös Loránd University (Budapest, Hungary) Department of English Studies School of English and American Studies

References

  • Bhabha, Homi K. 1994. The Location of Culture. London: Routledge.
  • Crisu, Corina. 2010. British Geographies in the Eastern European Mind: Rose Tremain’s The Road Home. In Facing the East in the West: Images of Eastern Europe in British Literature, Film and Culture, eds. Barbara Korte, Eva Ulrike Pirker, Sissy Helff, 365-379. New York: Rodopi.
  • Fried István. 2012. Imagológiai kérdések - Komparatisztikai kétségek. [Imagological Questions, Comparatistic Doubts.] In Bevezetés az összehasonlító irodalomtudományba. [Introduction into Comparative Literature.] 189-215. Budapest: Lucidus Kiadó.
  • Fried István. 2000. A „freudizmus” - ahogy Márai elgondolta. [“Freudism” as Márai conceptualized it.] Forrás vol. 32 no. 4: 26-37. http://www.forrasfolyoirat.hu/0004/fried.html (14 May 2015)
  • Greenblatt, Stephen. 2000. The Mousetrap. In Practicing New Historicism, eds. Catherine Gallagher and Stephen Greenblatt, 136-163. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Jaskulski, Józef. Friday Reeducated: Orientalizing the East-Central European Other in Rose Tremain’s The Road Home. http://www.inter-disciplinary.net/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/jozef-jaskulski-tremain-paper.pdf (22 April 2015)
  • Leerssen, Joep and Manfred Beller, eds. 2007. Imagology - The Cultural Construction and Literary Representation of National Characters: A Critical Survey. Amsterdam: Rodopi.
  • Starck, Kathleen. 2013. A Lot of Catching Up to Do - The West as a Civiliser of Post­Cold War Eastern Europe in Rose Tremain’s The Road Home. In From Popular Goethe to Global Pop - The Idea of the West between Memory and Empowerment, eds. Ines Detmers and Birte Heidemann, 55-70. Amsterdam: Rodopi.
  • Thiel, Julia Elena. 2014. “A Man May Travel Far”: Eastern European Labour Migration as a Quest for Masculine Self-Assertion in Rose Tremain’s The Road Home. In Verorten - Verhandeln - Verkörpern: Interdisziplinare Analysen zu Raum und Geschlecht, eds. Silke Förschler, Rebekka Habermas, Nicola Robbach, 197-218. Bielefeld: Transcript Verlag.
  • Tomczak, Anna Maria. 2013. Trying to Cross Frontiers of Fortress Europe - Rose Tremain’s Novel: The Road Home. In Crossroads in Literature and Culture, eds. Jacek Fabiszak, Ewa Urbaniak Rybicka, Bartosz Wolski, 451-461. Berlin: Springer Verlag.
  • Tremain, Rose. 2007. The Road Home. London: Vintage Books.

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.doi-10_1515_ausp-2015-0038
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