The Subject and Perception of Exile in the Works of Zoé Valdés. Everyday Nothing and Everyday Everything

Verica Savić

Abstract


The subject of exile and the political element are two main themes of two related but independent novels by Zoé Valdés: Everyday Nothing and Everyday Everything, in which she reveals her ideology by using techniques specific to contemporary Cuban literature created in exile. In addition to being narrative instead of political and journalistic novels, and despite other common elements, these two works are connected by the subject of exile. Their framework is different, as well as the content, time, and the message, but their ideology is the same. These novels have been chosen for this research paper from Valdés’s large opus because they deal with the same subject from different perspectives – exile as an idea, a vision of possible salvation, the exile from exile – thus allowing us to carry out an in-depth analysis of this eternal topic. There is a profound difference in the experience of exile, as well as in the  approach to this subject. The novels portray Cuban society in two different time frames, with many similarities and differences between them, while also depicting different stages of Valdés personal development as a writer.


Keywords


Cuba, exile, dictatorship, Cuban literature, Zoé Valdés

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References


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DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.25038/am.v0i10.136

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