36 pages 1 hour read

Nalo Hopkinson

Brown Girl in the Ring

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 1998

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Symbols & Motifs

The Center

The center is a recurring notion of in the novel that demonstrates marginalization as well as power. In the Prologue, the center is first introduced as Toronto’s city center, which has been abandoned by the government after the Riots, further impoverishing the area’s already poor residents. The more affluent residents fled the “rotten core” (3) for the suburbs as the city center continued to fall apart to crime and further poverty. Despite these economically debilitating circumstances, a whole community thrives in the city center to support one another. While there remains rampant crime and danger, there is also collective power that Ti-Jeanne witnesses after Mami’s death. Moved by Mami’s impact on their lives, the community members offer tokens of appreciation and support to Ti-Jeanne, demonstrating that marginalization is not removed from collective strength.

The center appears again when Ti-Jeanne astral projects over the CN Tower, readying herself to become Rudy’s duppy before the Jab-Jab’s intervention. Reminded of Mami’s words that “[t]he centre pole is the bridge between the worlds” (219), Ti-Jeanne uses the CN Tower as her center pole to summon the African spirits to her aid. The potency of the CN Tower as a conjuring rod challenges the notion of the center as a space far from saving.

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Related Titles

By Nalo Hopkinson