53 pages 1 hour read

Sarah Winman

Still Life

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 2021

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Background

Literary Context: Italy and the British Expatriate Experience

Still Life features characters who are British expatriates in Italy. The term “expatriate” refers to people who reside outside of their home country. What differentiates an expatriate from an immigrant is the balance between two cultures and nationalities. For example, as much as Ulysses Temper adapts to Italian life and culture, he is still well-connected to his English life and personhood: He is very much an Englishman in Italy. Expatriate literature is an important subgenre because expatriates occupy a unique cultural position, which provides an opportunity to see both (and all) the cultures to which they belong from a new perspective.

Expatriate literature was popularized by great authors like Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, and James Baldwin, who spent years living in Paris, where they developed their distinct authorial voices. The distance between these authors and their home country allowed them to write about America with the experience and influence of other cultures and the identity of a stranger to a new place. A common theme in expatriate literature is how new environments challenge and free the authorial interpretation of home.