Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: doi:10.22028/D291-45619
Title: A Black Bridget Jones? Candice Carty-Williams’s Queenie (2019): Challenging Discourses of Race and Gender in the Chick-Lit Genre
Author(s): Mißler, Heike
Language: English
Title: Journal of Popular Romance Studies
Volume: 12
Publisher/Platform: International Association for the Study of Popular Romance
Year of Publication: 2023
Free key words: Chick Lit
cultural imperialism
ethnicity
intersectionality
intertextuality
racism
whiteness
DDC notations: 400 Language, linguistics
Publikation type: Journal Article
Abstract: Candice Carty-Williams's best-selling debut novel Queenie (2019) has been marketed and reviewed as the story of a Black Bridget Jones. This comparison has been challenged by readers and critics alike, even though it was drawn by Carty-Williams herself. The fact that Carty-Williams chose a comparison to a marketing label that is still frequently belittled and often ignored altogether by critics to preclude another labelling practice based on her ethnicity speaks volumes not only about the whiteness of the British book industry, but also the lasting popular appeal of chick lit, whose death has been proclaimed numerous times since the days of Bridget Jones. This article argues that Carty Williams's novel has adapted the chick-lit formula that became famous with Fielding's Bridget Jones's Diary (1996), assimilated some genre conventions, and even openly hints at its intertext in places. However, Queenie has innovatively politicised this formula by subverting the neoliberal and postfeminist elements that dominated the narratives of many white chick-lit texts of the 1990s and early 2000s through an overt focus on racism in its many forms, but foremostly in the fields of dating and relationships. Through its exploration of the intersections of race, class, and gender, Queenie is an important and timely contribution to the tradition of Black female writing in Britain, as well as to the chick-lit genre.
DOI of the first publication: 10.70138/WHNN4141
URL of the first publication: https://doi.org/10.70138/WHNN4141
Link to this record: urn:nbn:de:bsz:291--ds-456198
hdl:20.500.11880/40126
http://dx.doi.org/10.22028/D291-45619
ISSN: 2159-4473
Date of registration: 16-Jun-2025
Faculty: P - Philosophische Fakultät
Department: P - Anglistik, Amerikanistik und Anglophone Kulturen
Professorship: P - Keiner Professur zugeordnet
Collections:SciDok - Der Wissenschaftsserver der Universität des Saarlandes

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