Exiled at Home: Women Writers on Alienation and Belonging

Image by Khusen Rustamov from Pixabay

I recently wrote a blog post about exiled writers, and it got me to thinking about another kind of exile: displacement.

Exile doesn’t always come from a government decree. Sometimes it’s internal. Sometimes it’s being pushed to the margins by gender, race, class, or identity. These writers, especially women and writers of color, capture the ache of displacement and the search for belonging.

Below is a list of women writers who wrote on the topics of alienation, displacement, and internal exile, and/or wrote within and despite them.

Which ones have you read? Which ones will you add to your reading list and library?

Women Writing Alienation & Internal Exile

Photo by Ono Kosuki—Pexels

Djuna Barnes – Explored themes of alienation (Ryder).

Isak Dinesen (Karen Blixen)Out of Africa shaped by her life in Kenya.

Sylvia Townsend WarnerLolly Willowes as a tale of self-exile from society.

Jean RhysWide Sargasso Sea as postcolonial exile and identity.

Virginia Woolf – Not exiled physically, but wrote on women’s exclusion (A Room of One’s Own).

Alice WalkerThe Color Purple on Black women’s displacement in the U.S. South.

Doris LessingThe Golden Notebook explored alienation and belonging.

Sylvia Plath – Themes of estrangement and psychic exile.

Women Writers in Political Exile

Photo by RDNE Stock project—Pexels

Hanan al-Shaykh – Lebanese novelist (The Story of Zahra) exploring war and displacement.

Samar Yazbek – Syrian exile memoir A Woman in the Crossfire.

Rosa Yassin Hassan – Syrian novelist writing from exile.

Inaam Kachachi – Iraqi journalist-novelist in exile.

Joumana Haddad – Lebanese writer challenging patriarchal exile of women’s voices.

Isabel Allende – Politically exiled, but also explores women’s exile from history and memory.

Women of Color on Displacement & Belonging

Photo by Ketut Subiyanto—Pexels

Alice Walker – American novelist grounding exile in racial history (also above).

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie—Nigerian novelist whose works (Americanah, Half of a Yellow Sun) explore migration, identity, and the ache of belonging across continents.

Yaa Gyasi—Ghanaian-American author of Homegoing and Transcendent Kingdom, tracing generational displacement and the lasting shadows of diaspora.

Imbolo Mbue—Cameroonian-American novelist whose Behold the Dreamers examines immigration, class, and the precariousness of the American dream.

Beryl Gilroy—Guyanese-born writer and pioneering Black headteacher in Britain, whose novels and memoirs reflect on migration, racism, and cultural belonging.

Toni Morrison—Nobel laureate who illuminated the Black American experience, centering the intergenerational wounds and resilience of communities uprooted by slavery and systemic racism.

Maya Angelou—Poet, memoirist, and performer whose life and work chronicle exile, return, and the search for home in a world marked by displacement.

Exile can mean losing a homeland. but it can also mean losing a place in society. Or never having one to begin with.


Is the weight of displacement making it hard for you to write?

Come join me and a small but growing group of quiet creatives who embrace the power of story to heal.

It’s a safe. It’s quiet. And everyone is welcome.

Your voice and your stories matter.

Learn more about Alchemy of Writing

Exiled Writers: Tragedy, Liberation, or Both?

Image by Yerson Retamal from Pixabay

What happens when a writer’s homeland turns against them? When the very act of writing becomes dangerous?

I talk about this in my recent YouTube video. Please have a watch and leave me a comment over on YouTube.

Exile has shaped literature across centuries. Some writers were formally banished by governments or political regimes; others fled by choice, fearing censorship, imprisonment, or death. Below is a chronological (not necessarily exhaustive) list of writers, divided into those exiled against their will and those who left voluntarily but carried exile’s weight in their work.


Writers Forced into Exile

Dante Alighieri (1265–1321) – Banished from Florence in 1302, he wrote The Divine Comedy while in exile, weaving political and personal anguish into one of the greatest works of world literature.

Ovid (43 BCE–17 CE) – The Roman poet was exiled by Emperor Augustus to Tomis (present-day Romania) for reasons still debated; his exile poems ache with loss and longing.

Voltaire (1694–1778) – The French Enlightenment writer spent years exiled in England after offending powerful figures with his sharp wit.

Lord Byron (1788–1824) – Though not officially banished, Byron fled England amid scandal, living and writing abroad until his death in Greece.

Victor Hugo (1802–1885) – Exiled from France for opposing Napoleon III, Hugo spent nearly 20 years abroad, where he wrote Les Misérables.

Émile Zola (1840–1902) – Fled France after publishing “J’Accuse,” his famous open letter defending Dreyfus; he lived in exile in England.

Oscar Wilde (1854–1900) – Imprisoned for “gross indecency,” Wilde left England after his release, living in France until his death.

Stefan Zweig (1881–1942) – The Austrian writer fled Nazism, living in the U.S. and Brazil, where despair drove him to suicide.

Bertolt Brecht (1898–1956) – Exiled from Nazi Germany, he lived in Scandinavia and the U.S., continuing his politically charged plays.

Pablo Neruda (1904–1973) – The Chilean poet and diplomat lived in exile due to his political activism.

Salman Rushdie (1947– ) – A fatwa issued in 1989 over The Satanic Verses forced Rushdie into hiding for years under police protection.

Ahmed Naji (1985– ) – Egyptian novelist imprisoned for “violating public morality,” later fled into exile.

Homeira Qaderi (1980– ) – Afghan writer and activist exiled for her outspoken defense of women’s rights.

Mohsen Emadi (1976– ) – Iranian poet and filmmaker forced into exile for political reasons.

Samar Yazbek (1970– ) – Syrian journalist and novelist, repeatedly exiled for her outspoken opposition to the Assad regime.


Writers Who Chose Voluntary Exile

James Joyce (1882–1941) – Left Ireland voluntarily, disillusioned with its politics and religion; wrote Ulysses while living abroad.

Joseph Conrad (1857–1924) – Born in Poland, lived much of his life abroad; adopted English as his literary language, embodying cultural exile.

Franz Kafka (1883–1924) – Though he never physically left Prague, Kafka lived as an “internal exile,” alienated by language, culture, and identity.

T.S. Eliot (1888–1965) – Born in the U.S., he chose to settle in England, where he became one of the most influential modernist poets.

D.H. Lawrence (1885–1930) – Left England after censorship battles, traveling widely and writing novels that challenged repression.

Ernest Hemingway (1899–1961) – Though not exiled politically, Hemingway chose to live abroad in Paris, Spain, and Cuba, shaping his identity as a writer.

Vladimir Nabokov (1899–1977) – Fled revolutionary Russia, then Nazi Germany; lived in exile in Europe and the U.S., writing masterpieces in his adopted English.

Carlos Fuentes (1928–2012) – The Mexican novelist often lived abroad, his work exploring identity, politics, and displacement.

Octavio Paz (1914–1998) – Spent long periods outside Mexico, his essays and poems grappling with cultural and political exile.

Isabel Allende (1942– ) – Fled Chile after Pinochet’s coup; much of her work (The House of the Spirits) explores exile, memory, and belonging.

José Donoso (1924–1996) – Chilean writer who lived in voluntary exile, exploring alienation in Latin American society.

Julio Cortázar (1914–1984) – Left Argentina for Paris, where he became a leading figure of Latin American literature in exile.


If you could self-exile, where would you go?

If your government were to exile you for your words or the stories you want to tell but haven’t yet, what would they be about?

Tell me in the comments, please!

As always, sending you mad writing mojo…

Happy writing!

Notice and disclaimer: This list was generated with the help of AI.