219 about by a desire for escape and what in the words of Bhabha (1994: xiii) can be called a culture of survival Maroko is actually a site of vernacular cosmopolitanism.”
140
In
Maroko‟s hybridized soundscape, Highlife music plays alongside reggae music and Nigerian Afro-fusion.
The presence of bioscopes, strewn over the slum showing John Wayne and Actor movies alongside Eastern Kung fu Movies sums up this landscape of desire that overhangs the material dystopia in Maroko. Chris Abani‟s
The Virgin of Flames is also set in downtown East Los Angeles, another marginal location in the megalopolis, with a protagonist named Black. Black is a thirty- six-year old painter trying to negotiate his identity cloaked by the shadow of childhood memories. Elvis and Black share an entrenched displeasure of the memories of a childhood
of physical and sexual abuse, an attraction to transvestites and a disturbing relationship with the figure of the father in their lives. In the wake of transsexual and transvestite dispositions, Elvis and Black practice and adopt marginal and problematic gender positions and sentiments, and the fact of their biological sonhood presents a set of complexes in their relationships with their fathers,
in memory, for Black and in reality and memory for Elvis.
Elvis‟s maternally-inclined genealogical sentiment is expressed in his love for the music of Elvis Presley, something his late mother impressed upon him. For economic reasons, he impersonates Elvis Presley, but this activity puts him at odds with the normative discourse on gender –
how masculinity is perceived, constructed and performed in this society and more importantly, how it is historicised in his relationship with his father and the male figures in his childhood life. His impersonation ritual involves using beauty products to adorn his face in an attempt to reproduce an image of Elvis Presley, as well as keep the memory of his late mother alive. These activities are perceived as effeminate by his father and also, as we shall see, by the overtly patriarchal society he lives in. I refer hereto Bhabha‟s idea of vernacular cosmopolitanism in reference to the cultures of the marginalised immigrants and diasporas in the West. According to Bhabha, it is a functional cosmopolitanism that consistently erases the gains of globalised cosmopolitanism and its illusionary idea of global development.”For Bhaba, vernacular cosmopolitanism is the essence of cultures
of survival in marginalised, economically poor communities at the edges of the urban nation. Refer to Bhabha‟s (1994) Looking Back, Moving Forward Notes on Vernacular Cosmopolitanism pp. ix-xxv.