6 research outputs found

    Memory, oblivion and nostalgia in Trezza Azzopardi's The Hiding Place

    Get PDF
    Shortlisted for the prestigious Booker Prize 2000, Trezza Azzopardi 's debut novel The Hiding Place is the devastatingly harsh but also deeply moving story of Frankie Gauci, his wife Mary, and their six daughters as seen through the eyes of Dolores, the youngest sister who slowly unravels the tragic secrets that haunt her past. Set in a Maltese immigrant community in Tiger Bay, Wales, and peopled with deeply flawed characters, The Hiding Place traces Dolores's journey through the seductive yet often terrifying labyrinth of memory, a labyrinth governed by its own primitive sense of familial law and order. Lyrical in one breath and stingingly realistic in the next, Azzopardi calls on her impressive mastery of language to weave an intensely self-reflexive story of guilt and innocence, absence and presence, fragmentation and plenitude and, above all, oblivion and memory. This paper focuses precisely on Azzopardi's treatment of memory as an instrument of reclamation and retrieval in the search for selfhood. Though memory is elusive and untrustworthy because of its polymorphic nature, at the same time it is endowed with a redemptive power capable of transforming the outside into the inside, denial into acceptance, and obscurity into revelation.peer-reviewe

    A Chief Secretary in Malta : Henry Lushington and the Italian question

    Get PDF
    In 1847 Henry Lushington was appointed Chief Secretary in Malta. During the turbulent years of the Italian Risorgimento, British liberal policies allowed a steady flow of Italian political refugees to enter Malta and a small community of exiles lived in Valletta. In 1849 a ship of refugees was not allowed to land by the Governor of Malta Richard More O'Ferrall, which led to an outcry in the British liberal press. This paper gives an overview of Lushington's life and literary output, including writing linked to his years in Malta.peer-reviewe
    corecore