1. Jumping Monkey Hill
1.1. by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
1.1.1. Black Woman
1.1.2. Postcolonial Feminist
1.1.3. Nigeria
1.2. Unjunwa
1.2.1. Main Character
1.2.2. Nigerian
1.2.3. Lost her job
1.2.4. Writer
1.2.4.1. Chioma
1.2.4.1.1. Character in Unjunwa's story
1.2.4.1.2. Harassed
1.3. Edward Campbell
1.3.1. Old English Man
1.3.2. Position of Power
1.3.3. Stares at Unjunwa's Body
2. Good Advice is Rarer than Rubies
2.1. by Salman Rushdie
2.1.1. Bombay, British India
2.1.2. Indian Man
2.1.3. Postcolonial and Migration Writing
2.2. Miss Rehana
2.2.1. Protagonist
2.2.2. Indian Woman
2.2.3. Described as beautiful
2.2.4. Does not want to immigrate to England
2.2.5. Uses the system in her advantage
2.3. Muhammad Ali
2.3.1. Point of view
2.3.2. Advisor
2.3.3. Scammer
2.3.4. Underestimates Miss Rehana
2.4. Setting: British Consulate
3. A Small Place
3.1. by Jamaica Kincaid
3.1.1. Black Woman
3.1.2. Antigua and Barbuda
3.1.3. Professor of African and African American Studies
3.1.4. Postcolonial Studies
3.2. Setting: Antigua
3.3. Narrated by a native
3.4. Tone: upfront, sincere, cynical, condescending, denunciating
3.5. Critique and mockery of tourists
3.6. Legacy of colonialism
3.7. Poverty
4. When Mr. Pirzada Came to Dine
4.1. by Jhumpa Lahiri
4.1.1. Indian Descendant Woman
4.1.2. England
4.1.3. Postcolonial and Immigrant Experience Writing
4.2. Lilia
4.2.1. Narrator
4.2.2. Remembering her childhood
4.2.3. Parents are immigrants from India
4.3. Mr. Pirzada
4.3.1. From Bangladesh
4.3.1.1. At the time part of Pakistan and at war
4.3.1.1.1. Religious Conflict (Hindus vs. Muslims)
4.3.2. Muslim
4.3.3. "Not Indian"
4.4. Setting: Boston, USA
5. Jump
5.1. by Nadine Gordimer
5.1.1. White Woman
5.1.2. South Africa
5.1.3. Political Activist
5.2. Soldier
5.2.1. Protagonist
5.2.2. Intelligence, spy, deserter, informant
5.2.3. White supremacist Group
5.2.3.1. Violence
5.2.3.2. Killing
5.2.3.3. Rape
5.2.4. Ordinary colonial child with some privileges
5.2.5. Immigrant parents from Europe