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Revista Universidad y Sociedad

On-line version ISSN 2218-3620

Abstract

GULIYEVA NURADDIN, Ilaha. The factor of national identity in British literature. Universidad y Sociedad [online]. 2025, vol.17, n.4  Epub Aug 25, 2025. ISSN 2218-3620.

National self-awareness is a primary and disputed dimension of collective affiliation, to which appeal is made in historical memory, political ritual, and cultural symbolism. Although the social sciences have traditionally examined British national identity from the perspectives of state-formation and civic nationalism, the literary productions analogous to those-whereby authors imagine, negotiate, and critique "Englishness," "Britishness," and their ethnic and civic complicities-have drawn relatively scant systematic notice. This research addresses that gap by examining how British literature of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries encodes themes of national self-awareness, through an interdisciplinary methodology that pairs close reading of exemplary texts with theoretical frameworks from nationalism studies and postcolonial theory. The study of canonical writers (i.e., Orwell, Kipling, Forster, and Dickens) alongside postmodern writers reveals literature habitually employs island metaphors, memory rituals, and everyday cultural practices-such as afternoon tea and borderland encounters-to naturalize and destabilize monolithic identity constructions. Our results demonstrate literary texts are double-edged instruments: they can cement state-sanctioned identities while also exposing their exclusions and contradictions. In charting these narrative strategies, the study contributes a nuanced model for the integration of literary analysis into broader discourse on national identity, multiculturalism, and devolution. The implications extend to Brexit-era politics and cultural memory contests of today, and point to the ongoing possibility for literature to serve as a valuable archive and resource for resistance in the face of socio-political transformation.

Keywords : Britain; England; Literature; Self-awareness; National identity.

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