In this article, I would like to analyze the protagonist "Jos" of the novel "trumpet" written by Jack Kei. Jos, actually women live with their men, married a woman, decided to adopt a son. For readers, whether Jos is regarded as a male or a female is still an unresolved issue. For this reason, I will examine the behavior and statements of Jos in the novel and I would like to summarize the meanings of "typical feminization" and "typical masculinity". In the process, I would like to concentrate on this question. Because their love and lifestyle is all but normal and normal, but the reason why Kay chose to include Jos and Millie in a heterosexual conversation.
Jackie Kay 's life story is as attractive and complex as her literary work. This comparison is very important as all Kay's works come from her biography. They are concerned about the complex nature of identity. Kay's father was a black Nigerian and visited Edinburgh when he met a Scottish white mother of Kay. After returning to Nigeria, the mother noticed that she was pregnant and decided to abandon her child. Later, Kay was adopted by a white Couple who was sticking to radical politics. As Kai grew, she began to identify herself as a lesbian
In this article, I would like to analyze the protagonist "Jos" of the novel "trumpet" written by Jack Kei. Jos, actually women live with their men, married a woman, decided to adopt a son. For readers, whether Jos is regarded as a male or a female is still an unresolved issue. For this reason, I will examine the behavior and statements of Jos in the novel and I would like to summarize the meanings of "typical feminization" and "typical masculinity". - Follow up by Tim O'Brien Romanticism "Follow Cassia" influenced the influence of Tim O'Brien's follower Cacciato on his narrative skill (see Raymond) and its role as a meta-fiction in literature. Situation (see Herzog) Other critics commented on topics of time (see Mike Williams) and subject and structure (see Vanetta). Finally, critics discovered that the structure of the novel is decentralized to reveal the nature of American participation in Vietnam.
The work of Jackie Kay provides a great literary tool for studying the complexity of identity. Ethnicity, sex and nationality are signs that people help us to position, but mainly because of the simplified and simple concept of these markers hinder the ability of us to communicate and understand each other I will. We can resist, but we are still in front of other people. Kay's work represents a strong desire to enable more complex identity images and I hope that this understanding will lead to greater acceptance of differences and greater communication and connection behavior.