Analyse Stuart Hall's cultural identity and diaspora essay. Use his ides to frame a reading of Kincaid's Upon Seeing England for the First Time. what insights might the idea lend? What questions might come up? Looking at the different literary texts, what different questions emerge? Why are they different? What similar questions emerge? What's potentially interesting about that? Do both texts seem to relate similarly or differently to the key concept? Is anything surprising to you here? What might be interesting about these similarities or differences? "How does Hall's idea of a 'becoming' cultural identity that is subject to the 'continuous 'play' of history' apply to the representation of immigrant experience explored in "Drown" and "Let them Call it Jazz"? - and how do those two texts help us understand Hall's argument better?"