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Lucy: The Caribbean Identity

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Class Class is quite evident throughout this novel. Although Lucy does not admit she is part of a black race she still values the Caribbean identity. She shows that when she gives hints that allows the reader to imagine her Caribbean identity and shows that she is a woman with colour. For example, Lucy observes her and passengers in the train on the journey to Mariah’s childhood home. “The other people sitting down to eat dinner all looked like Mariah’s relatives; the people waiting on them all looked like mine...On closer observation, they were not at all like my relatives; they only looked like them... Mariah did not seem to notice what she had in common with the other diners, or what I had in common with the waiters” (Kincaid 32). Not only
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