Analyzing Phillips 'Hollywood's Casablanca'

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In order to get rid of uneasy feeling of unbelongingness and search for a home Phillips decides to travel back to his birth place, Caribbean. The first chapter of The European Tribe is entitled ‘Hollywood’s Casablanca’. This chapter deals with Phillips’ adventure in a Moroccan city Casablanca. It is the largest city of Morocco that is located in the western part of the country on the Atlantic Ocean. Phillips travels to Casablanca thinking that it would be a nice place as seen in the movie but he is puzzled to see the actual condition of the Casablanca. He explores the city that is seen through the eyes of Hollywood in comparison to the real city he experiences. He finds out that Hollywood might have exaggerated the life in Casablanca. Before …show more content…

By declaring him ‘other’, they try to exclude or marginalizes him from Spanish society. The same kind of experience is felt by Caryl Phillips in Andalusia, when he encounters with a group of some boys in a street of Tarifa. They offer him a cigarette. Phillips rejects this offer and faces a very ridiculous experience. “Then one of the boys jammed the smallest boy’s hand up against my arm, and they all noticed that his skin colour vaguely resembled mine. Again they all laughed. ‘He is’, announced their leader, his finger wagging accusingly at the small boy, ‘un negro.’ ‘Ah, dos negros. Un grande negro y un pequeno negro,’ observed another boy.” (29) The boy has used Spanish language and refers Phillips as a big negro and the small boy as a small negro. All the boys including Phillips begin to laugh but Phillips notices that, “the boy was not black but just the possessor of a slightly tanned skin, centuries of Jewish, Gypsy, Moorish, Arab and European blood surging through his young veins.” (29) This comment of Phillips presents his perception of African Spain. He presents the hybridities in a more specific way in this travelogue. In an interview with Maya G. Vinuesa Phillips presents his views about Spain, “The early generation of British writers who went to Spain – Robert Graves, Spender– did so because it was cheap. It was incredibly cheap and warm and you could live in Spain and write and work and feel connected to a very powerful culture, a very European, but different

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