“I am the sole author”: inauthenticity and Intertextuality in Zadie Smith’s NW

Publication date

2020-12-23



Abstract

This article examines the role of intertextuality in Zadie Smith’s NW (2012) and the novel’s questioning of authorship, authenticity and identity. Relying on intertextual and postcolonial theories, the article lays bare how Smith’s novel questions the fixity and stability of selves and how she situates herself as an inherently intertextual author disrupted by others and potentially disruptive of (post)colonial ways of being and one that plays with notions of (in)authenticity and originality. For this purpose, the article pays attention to the novel’s intertextual links with the historical case of the Tichborne claimant and Jorge Luis Borges’s fictionalisation of it in the short story “Tom Castro, the Implausible Impostor,” included in the collection A Universal History of Infamy (1933). [...]

Document Type

Article

Document version

Published version

Language

English

Pages

17 p.

Publisher

AEDEAN

Published in

Atlantis. Journal of the Spanish Association for Anglo-American Studies. 2020;42(2):180-196

Recommended citation

Pérez Zapata, Beatriz. I am the sole author: inauthenticity and Intertextuality in Zadie Smith’s NW. Atlantis-Spain. 2020;42(2):180-196. DOI: 10.28914/Atlantis-2020-42.2.09

Rights

Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International

Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International

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