The beauty of differencePosted in Articles, Book/Video Reviews, Media Archive on 2010-03-27 19:28Z by Steven |
In The Fray
2005-12-04
Zadie Smith’s latest novel, “On Beauty”, is many things. Chief among them: an homage to differences.
For those of mixed heritage — who straddle more than one race, nationality, faith, class, or whatever else — uncovering a coherent identity can be a complicated emotional journey. There are multiple, potentially conflicting, avenues and models, and choosing one or melding several is difficult business. This may be part of why Zadie Smith—herself the product of an English father and Jamaican mother—returns to this endlessly rich topic in her third novel, On Beauty, which was short-listed for the 2005 Man Booker Prize. As with her acclaimed debut novel, White Teeth, published when she was a mere 23 years old, and her less stunning second book, The Autograph Man, Smith ambitiously mines the cultural morass of mixed worlds. Now, with her latest work, she paints her most vivid portrait of the challenges and ecstasies of multiculturalism…
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