This section contains 5,470 words (approx. 19 pages at 300 words per page) |
SOURCE: Lalla, Barbara. “Registering Woman: Senior's Zig-zag Discourse and Code-Switching in Jamaican Narrative.” ARIEL 29, no. 4 (October 1998): 83-98.
In the following essay, Lalla traces the changing language in Senior's story “Zig-zag,” arguing that “the shifting experiences and perspectives of the child protagonist emerge through a multifaceted and shifting discourse.”
The traumatic process of becoming a woman, in the setting of a brown, rural, middle-class Jamaican family, is a dominant factor in shaping the language of Olive Senior's short story “Zig-zag,” in Discerner of Hearts. Jamaican Creole, Standard English, and intermediate varieties of these comprise Jamaican discourse, and “Zig-zag” shifts between the codes and intersects scribal discourse with suggestions of orality. Through these shifts, “Zig-zag” traces the emotional upheavals of its central character, Sadie, one of two daughters in a household fraught with tensions about mixed roots.
Sadie's sister, Muffet, is older, fairer, better behaved, admired, and inevitably politely spoken...
This section contains 5,470 words (approx. 19 pages at 300 words per page) |