Abstract :
Pan-Africanists and proponents of Négritude associate home with Africa. However,
Derek Walcott detours from this essentialist belief. My interpretation of his epic poem,
Omeros (1990), provides a detailed analysis of Walcott’s negative attitude toward
Négritude. Among the characters in Omeros, this paper focuses on Achille’s quest for self
and identity in Africa. Taking Homi Bhabha’s concept of the “unhomely” as an analytical
tool, I will show how Walcott critically illustrates the unhomeliness of Africa as home for
Afro-Caribbeans. Even though essentially Africa is regarded as the ancestral homeland
for people of African descent, the uncanny feeling it creates, negates this association. Yet,
Omeros proposes that the New World itself, in spite of its ambivalences, can be home for
the New World inhabitants as it could create a sense of familiarity—or what Yi-Fu Tuan
terms “topophilia”—and a communal sense of relatedness. As I will argue, these features
can be taken as characteristics of home and can create, albeit not a true home, but a sense
of at-homeness with the context of the new location.
Keywords :
homecoming , Bhabha , topophilia , community relatedness , Omeros , Achille , Walcott