“Jus’ hol’ yuh breath an’ kick”: Queer Self-Made Womanhood in Nicole Dennis-Benn’s “Swimmer”

Autori

  • Teresa Pereira University of Lisbon, Portugal Autor

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31178/INTER.13.27.4

Cuvinte cheie:

myth, self-made man, American dream, displacement, migrant, LGBTQ+

Rezumat

This article performs a close reading of the essay “Swimmer,” written by the Jamaican American novelist Nicole Dennis-Benn and published in the anthology The Good Immigrant USA: 26 Writers Reflect on America (2019). On the one hand, “Swimmer” endorses the myths of the self-made man and the American dream by describing the remarkable achievements of its author, regardless of all the obstacles in her way. On the other hand, though, it questions the American success mythology by shedding light on the hardships faced by migrants. As a result, this article considers the following research questions: “Does Nicole Dennis-Benn’s ‘Swimmer’ both legitimize and challenge the myth of the self-made man and, by extension, the myth of the American dream?” and, if so, “In which way are the myths of the self-made man and of the American dream simultaneously celebrated and questioned in ‘Swimmer’?”. To do so, this analysis adopts an approach located within the field of cultural studies, embracing its interdisciplinary nature and combining literary studies with American and Jamaican history and culture, while departing from Heike Paul’s problematization of American myths in The Myths that Made America: An Introduction to American Studies (2014).

Biografie autor

  • Teresa Pereira, University of Lisbon, Portugal

    Teresa Pereira is an Invited Assistant Professor of American Studies at The Faculty of Human and Social Sciences, Nova University of Lisbon, Portugal. She holds an MA and a PhD in Modern Literatures and Cultures from Nova University of Lisbon, and she is a researcher at the Centre for English, Translation, and Anglo-Portuguese Studies (CETAPS). In both her MA and PhD, she comparatively studied literature and video games, and received the award “Melhores Mestres 2013/2014” for the work she developed during her MA, and a FCT PhD Studentship to write her PhD thesis. Teresa Pereira also has a second MA in Teaching English and Spanish as Foreign Languages, for which she received the award “Melhores Mestres 2021/2022.” Her main research interests are Game Studies, Literary Studies, Cultural Studies, English and American Studies, Anglo-Portuguese Studies, Foreign Language Education, and Intercultural Citizenship Education.

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Publicat

2025-02-06

Cum cităm

“Jus’ hol’ yuh breath an’ kick”: Queer Self-Made Womanhood in Nicole Dennis-Benn’s “Swimmer”. (2025). [Inter]sections, 27(1). https://doi.org/10.31178/INTER.13.27.4

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