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Seminar paper from the year 2006 in the subject English Language and Literature Studies - Literature grade: 1 University of Marburg (Institut für Anglistik und Amerikanistik) course: Postmodern and/or Postcolonial: Contemporary Writing from Britain and the Commonwealth language: English abstract: Zadie Smiths novel White Teeth deals with families and generations from diverse ethnic backgrounds; and in the four main chapters Archie 1974 1945 Samad 1984 1857 Irie 1990 1907 and Magid Millat and Marcus 1992 1999 she approaches them from several angles. As a result there has been a discussion on who is to be treated as the central character in this novel. One possible answer to this is offered by Nina Shen Rastogi: The main character in White Teeth isnt a character in any traditional sense - its the city of London itself. Smiths goal is less to paint a portrait of any particular character than it is to create a large-scale character sketch of a particular place and a particular time. White Teeth is about the foibles of a community of near-strangers and almost-friends as it collectively stumbles towards an uncertain future. The paper will investigate this approach by dealing with London as it is depicted in this postcolonial novel. After a working definition on the diversely discussed notion of postcolonialism (I.1) there will be a closer look on London both as a physical location (I.2.a) and a literary region (I.2.b). The main issues will be the history of immigration facts about multiculturalism today and a brief look on how the colonial legacy has been depicted in postcolonial literature in London. A conclusion (I.3) will summarize the results and present some main questions for the analysis of White Teeth (II). Here the paper will take a look on the role of the characters interacting with each other and on how they compromise between their cultural legacy and Londons society (II.1). This will be the major part of the analysis. In two sho