‘I Don’t Want to Be Other. IWant to Be Normal’: Mental Boundaries and the Polish Experience in the UK in Agnieszka Dale’s Fox Season and Other Short Stories
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteDate
2024-04-06Referencia bibliográfica
Andrés-Cuevas, Isabel María. 2024. ‘I Don’t Want to Be Other. I Want to Be Normal’: Mental Boundaries and the Polish Experience in the UK in Agnieszka Dale’s Fox Season and Other Short Stories. Humanities 13: 61. [https://doi.org/10.3390/h13020061]
Patrocinador
Agencia Estatal de Investigación (Spanish Government) PID2021-122433NB-I00Résumé
Borders and frontiers are often problematized in Agnieszka Dale’s Fox Season and Other
Short Stories (2017), where mental borders seem to be more divisive than spatial boundaries. Many of
these narratives feature Polish immigrants in Britain who struggle with their displaced condition
in various ways. As some of the stories in the collection reveal, the scenario of post-Brexit Britain
compromises conviviality amongst different groups, including the Polish community. Special attention
is placed upon how several narratives in the volume underscore the prevalence in British society
of Polish stereotypes as the crystallisation of the still widespread animosity against non-Europeans.
Homi Bhabha’s notions regarding the formation and dynamics of stereotypes will be helpful in
understanding the mechanisms beneath such constructions. Likewise, some of the major tenets of
social theory, as well as Edward Said’s notion of ‘Orientalism’, will contribute to shedding light
upon this resentment towards the Polish minority, occasionally adopted too by already established
immigrants against their former compatriots. This article will ultimately intend to draw attention to
the cautionary nature of Dale’s collection as a call for harmony and the appreciation of difference
among nations, thus preventing the gloomy perspectives the dystopian futures of some of these
stories forecast upon Europe.