Abstract

Despite the ubiquity of the SS Empire Windrush as a symbol of post-war Caribbean migration to Britain, there are few literary evocations of its journey and arrival, and, of those, the majority are literary commissions from 1998, the year in which the ship was to become legendary. The synthetic nature of the literary engagement with the ship confirms its own construction as an historical event made retrospectively famous. This article describes and interrogates the 1998 rise to prominence of the Windrush, before examining the relationship of the actual ship to literary/cultural criticism and literary works. It contends that the small body of poetic and fictional narratives about the Windrush both problematizes elements of a dominant Windrush narrative while simultaneously confirming the ship’s primacy.

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