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'Your own goddamn idiom': Junot Díaz’s translingualism in The brief wondrous life of Oscar Wao

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journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-09, 00:45 authored by Maria Lauret
Whilst Bharati Mukherjee has identified Junot Díaz as a new American immigrant writer who refuses to abandon his mother tongue and “pre-migration historical inheritance,” Toni Morrison has argued that language is “the most valuable point of entry into the question of cultural (or racial) distinction.” Considering both the difference between old and new American immigrant writing and the question of cultural and racial distinction in Díaz’s writing, close analysis of The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao shows the newness and the political valency of Díaz’s translingualism. It reveals how his narrator Yunior’s oral-sounding discourse is created from high literary techniques and references combined with the “tainted” languages of sci-fi and fantasy, hip hop and Spanishes of the street. It is in this cultural and linguistic miscegenation that Díaz’s originality and radical poetics reside, as they make up an original new-immigrant literary discourse that is distinctly his “own goddamn idiom.”

History

Publication status

  • Published

File Version

  • Accepted version

Journal

Studies in the Novel

ISSN

0039-3827

Publisher

Johns Hopkins University Press

Issue

4

Volume

48

Page range

494-512

Department affiliated with

  • English Publications

Full text available

  • Yes

Peer reviewed?

  • Yes

Legacy Posted Date

2016-04-04

First Open Access (FOA) Date

2017-03-01

First Compliant Deposit (FCD) Date

2016-04-04

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