ABSTRACT

Since his migration to Britain in 1968, Abdulrazak Gurnah has become

known both as an important writer of fiction and as a critic and reviewer

of African literature. Born in Zanzibar in 1948, Gurnah’s arrival

coincided with the heyday of Sergeant Pepper and was only months before

Enoch Powell was to deliver his now notoriously xenophobic ‘Rivers of

Blood’ speeches. From the publication of his first novel in 1987, Gurnah

explored the theme of the migrant’s displacement, asking what happens ‘to

people who are in every respect part of a place, but who neither feel part of

a place, nor are regarded as being part of a place’. In his early novels –

Memory of Departure (1987), Pilgrim’s Way (1988) and Dottie (1990) –

the focus was primarily on questions of the unhomeliness of place as well as

the political and social changes which have caused such huge demographic

shifts in the late twentieth-century world. Paradise, his fourth novel, was

shortlisted for the Booker Prize in 1994 and is set in East Africa in the

decade before the outbreak of the First World War. It presents the reader

with a number of different and competing stories which not only interro-

gate standard European versions of history but also complicate the

strategic nationalisms of some earlier fictions by African writers.