African-Caribbean Women, (Post)? Diaspora, and the Meaning of Home

African-Caribbean Women, (Post)? Diaspora, and the Meaning of Home

Author: 
Beckles-Raymond, Gabriella
Place: 
Oxon
Publisher: 
Taylor & Francis Group
Date published: 
2020
Record type: 
Journal Title: 
African and Black Diaspora: an international journal
Source: 
African and Black Diaspora: An International Journal, Volume 13, Number 2, 2020, PP.
Abstract: 

Drawing on bell hooks, Audre Lorde and Carole Boyce-Davies, this paper develops an ethical framework to provide a gendered analysis of relative power inside and outside the home. In doing so, it considers the ways in which our view of home as African-Caribbean women, impacts our understanding of '(post) diaspora' (Dunn, Leith, and Suzanne Scafe. 2019. "African-Caribbean Women: Migration, Diaspora, Post-Diaspora." Caribbean Review of Gender Studies 13: 1-16) in the UK. Insofar as home is central to the idea of diaspora, I suggest that home must be conceptualised as an interdependent 'adult's' home rather than a dependent 'child's' home. On this reading, in the context of global power relations, I caution that while offering a useful and necessary point of departure from diaspora, the use of 'post' could be deployed to undermine an unapologetically intersectional black politics. As such, I claim the (Post) Diaspora Network's methodology, rather than the term itself, best demonstrates the liberatory intent and importance of a (post) diaspora subjectivity.

Language: 

CITATION: Beckles-Raymond, Gabriella. African-Caribbean Women, (Post)? Diaspora, and the Meaning of Home . Oxon : Taylor & Francis Group , 2020. African and Black Diaspora: An International Journal, Volume 13, Number 2, 2020, PP. - Available at: https://library.au.int/african-caribbean-women-post-diaspora-and-meaning-home-0