Literary studies: postcolonial literature Books
Brill Mobilities and Cosmopolitanisms in African and Afrodiasporic Literatures
Book SynopsisIn Mobilities and Cosmopolitanisms, Anna-Leena Toivanen combines mobilities research, postcolonial literary studies, and theories of cosmopolitanism to explore the representations and often complex intertwinements of different mobility practices and cosmopolitanisms in contemporary Franco- and Anglophone African and Afrodiasporic literary texts.Table of ContentsAcknowledgements Introduction 1 Mobility and Cosmopolitanism: Complex Relations, Shortcomings, and Unease 2 Mobilities, Representation, and the Literary Form 3 Outline of the Book and Chapter Summaries PART 1 Trouble in the Business Class 1 Anxious Mobilities of Afropolitans avant la lettre Ama Ata Aidoo’s Changes: A Love Story 1 Automobility: Undecidedness in the Streets of Accra 2 Hotels as In-between Spaces 3 Transnational Business Class Travel: Afropolitans avant la lettre 4 Conclusion: Freedom of Movement? 2 The Hotel as a Space of Transit in Sefi Atta’s and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s Short Stories 1 Atta’s Hotel: A Chronotope of Hypermobility, Inequality, and Unbelonging 2 Adichie’s Hotel Room: Adulterous Space between the Domestic and the Public 3 Conclusion: Being in Transit, Longing for Home 3 Uneasy ‘Homecoming’ in Alain Mabanckou’s Lumières de Pointe-Noire 1 Returnee: A Tourist-Native 2 Nostalgia and Loss 3 Returned Gazes, Unbalanced Dialogues 4 Blind Spot behind the Camera: La blanche 5 Conclusion: Problematics of a Business Class Return PART 2 Budget Travels, Practical Cosmopolitanisms 4 New Technologies and Communication Gaps in Novels by Liss Kihindou, Véronique Tadjo, NoViolet Bulawayo, and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie 1 Formal Matters: The Mobile Poetics of Communication Technologies 2 Technological Advances – From Letters to Email and Skype 3 Creating Distance: Communication Gaps 4 Conclusion: Ruptured Dialogues and Unbalanced Cosmopolitanisms 5 Everyday Urban Mobilities in Michèle Rakotoson’s Elle, au printemps and Alain Mabanckou’s Tais-toi et meurs 1 Cartographies of Paris 2 Débrouillardise Cosmopolitanism: Survival in a New Environment 3 Peripheral Dead Ends 4 Conclusion: Managing the Metropolis through Mobility 6 European Peripheries and Practical Cosmopolitanism in Fabienne Kanor’s Faire l’aventure 1 Peripheries and the Dream of “la grosse Europe” 2 Débrouillardise Cosmopolitanism: Limits and Potentials 3 Conclusion: Out of Reach? Centres and Cosmopolitan Ideals PART 3 Abject Travels of Citizens of Nowhere 7 Failing Border Crossings and Cosmopolitanism in Brian Chikwava’s Harare North 1 Cosmopolitanism as an Active Engagement 2 Instances of Anti-cosmopolitanism 3 Non-dialogue and Linguistic Nonconformity 4 Parodying the Afropolitan 5 Abject Unbelonging 6 Conclusion: Cosmopolitanism’s Breakdown 8 Arrested Clandestine Odysseys in Sefi Atta’s “Twilight Trek” and Marie NDiaye’s Trois femmes puissantes 1 Erased Identities 2 Tropes of Mobility: Shoes, Trucks, and Boats 3 Sand and Sea: The Slavery Parallel 4 Conclusion: Precarious Journeys 9 Zombie Travels J. R. Essomba’s Le Paradis du nord and Caryl Phillips’s A Distant Shore 1 Tropes of Zombifying Mobilities: Hiding, Confinement, Dehumanisation, and Darkness 2 Not Feeling It: Lost Selves, Lost Emotions 3 Europe and the Failures of Cosmopolitanism 4 Eliminating the Zombie 5 Conclusion: The Poetics of Zombification Coda Bibliography Index
£43.20
Brill Semiotic Encounters: Text, Image and Trans-Nation
Book SynopsisSemiotic Encounters: Text, Image and Trans-Nation aims at opening up scholarly debates on the contemporary challenges of intertextuality in its various intersections with postcolonial and visual culture studies. Commencing with three theoretical contributions, which work towards the creation of frameworks under which intertextuality can be (re)viewed today, the volume then explores textual and visual encounters in a number of case studies. While (a) the dimension of the intertextual in the traditional sense (as specified e.g. by Genette) and (b) the widening of the concept towards visual and digital culture govern the structure of the volume, questions of the transnational and/or postcolonial form a recurrent subtext. The volume’s combination of theoretical discussions and case studies, which predominantly deal with ‘English classics’ and their rewritings, film adaptations and/or rereadings, will mainly attract graduate students and scholars working on contemporary literary theory, visual culture and postcolonial literatures.Table of ContentsIntroduction Theorising Textual and Visual Encounters Mary Orr: Intertextuality: Old Debates in New Contexts Harish Trivedi: Anglophone Transnation, Postcolonial Translation: The Book and the Film as Namesakes Renate Brosch: Migrating Images and Communal Experience Textual Encounters Caroline Lusin: Encountering Darkness: Intertextuality and Polyphony in J.M. Coetzee’s Dusklands (1974) and Matthew Kneale’s English Passengers (2000) Georgiana Banita: Affect, Kitsch and Transnational Literature: Azar Nafisi’s “Portable Worlds” Walter Göbel: Washington Irving’s “Rip van Winkle”, A Postcolonial Reading or: In Search of a Usable Past Irina Bauder-Begerow: Echoing Dickens: Three Rewritings of Great Expectations Sarah Säckel: What’s in a Wodehouse? (Non-) Subversive Shakespearean Intertextualities in P.G. Wodehouse’s Jeeves and Wooster Novels Ida M. Samperi: “No Text Just Comes out Ex Nihilo, It Always Comes out of Other Texts”: Christine Brooke-Rose’s Thru Visual Encounters Nicola Glaubitz: Transcribing Images – Reassembling Cultures: Kazuo Ishiguro’s Japan Joachim Frenk and Christian Krug: Handovers of Empire: Transatlantic Transmissions in Popular Culture Sonja Fielitz: Fish and Chips with Marshmallows? Possibilities and Limitations of Trans-Cultural Intermediality Susanne Gruss: Shakespeare in Bollywood? Vishal Bhardwaj’s Omkara Amira Nowaira: Text and Pretext: Reading Cultural and Ideological Paradigms in the Hollywood and Egyptian Movie Adaptations of Tolstoy’s Anna Karenina Noha Hamdy: Revisiting Transmediality: 9/11 Between Spectacle and Narrative Wolfram R. Keller: “Long Live the New Flesh”? David Cronenberg’s Videodrome and the Limits of Ovidian Metamorphosis
£91.65
Brill A Sea for Encounters: Essays Towards a Postcolonial Commonwealth
Book SynopsisThe present volume contains general essays on: the relevance of ‘Commonwealth’ literature; the treatment of Dalits in literature and culture; the teaching of African literature in the UK; ‘sharing places’ and Drum magazine in South Africa; black British book covers as primers for cultural contact; Christianity, imperialism, and conversion; Orang Pendek and Papuans in colonial Indonesia; Carnival and drama in the anglophone Caribbean; issues of choice between the Maltese language and Its Others; and patterns of interaction between married couples in Malta. As well as these, there are essays providing close readings of works by the following authors: Chinua Achebe, André Aciman, Diran Adebayo, Monica Ali, Edward Atiyah, Margaret Atwood, Murray Bail, Peter Carey, Amit Chaudhuri, Austin Clarke, Sara Jeannette Duncan, Amitav Ghosh, Nadine Gordimer, Antjie Krog, Hanif Kureishi, Naguib Mahfouz, David Malouf, V.S. Naipaul, Michael Ondaatje, Tayeb Salih, Zadie Smith, Ahdaf Soueif, Yvonne Vera. Contributors: Jogamaya Bayer, Katrin Berndt, Sabrina Brancato, Monica Bungaro, Judith Lütge Coulli, Robert Cribb, Natasha Distiller, Evelyne Hanquart–Turner, Marie Herbillon, Tuomas Huttunen, Gen’ichiro Itakura, Jacqueline Jondot, Karen King–Aribisala, Ursula Kluwick, Dorothy Lane, Ben Lebdai, Lourdes López–Ropero, Amin Malak, Daniel Massa, Concepción Mengibar–Rico, Susanne Reichl, Brigitte Scheer–Schaezler, Lydia Sciriha, Jamie S. Scott, Andrea Strolz, Peter O. Stummer, Cynthia vanden Driesen, Clare Thake Vassallo.Table of ContentsIntroduction and Acknowledgements Towards a Postcolonial Commonwealth Daniel Massa: The Relevance of Commonwealth Literature Peter O. Stummer: The Commitment Against Exclusion Monica Bungaro: The Teaching of African Literature in the UK: Theoretical and Pedagogical Implications Borders and Crossings Jogamaya Bayer: Crossing the Borders in Monica Ali’s Brick Lane and V.S. Naipaul’s Half a Life Sabrina Brancato: Transcultural Outlooks in The Buddha of Suburbia and Some Kind of Black Gen’ichiro Itakura: Jewishness, Goyishness, and Blackness: Zadie Smith’s The Autograph Man Lourdes López–Ropero : The Pleasures of Slave Food: The Politics of Creolization in Austin Clarke’s Pigtails ’n Breadfruit Natasha Distiller: “The Most Motley Crewe in All the World”: Sharing Places in South Africa Ben Lebdai: Nadine Gordimer’s The Pickup: Immigration/Emigration in Today’s World Perception, Space, Time Susanne Reichl: Cognitive Encounters: Priming the Reader for Cultural Contact Katrin Berndt: The Limitations of the Chronotope: Female Longing for Unconstrained Space in Yvonne Vera’s Butterfly Burning Evelyne Hanquart–Turner: Amit Chaudhuri’s Afternoon Raag: Interplay and Translation of the Chronotopes Marie Herbillon: Spatial Linearity and Postcolonial Parody in Murray Bail’s Holden’s Performance Brigitte Scheer–Schaezler: In the Museum of Loss: Reflections on André Aciman’s Essays Religion and the Sacred Dorothy Lane: Dominion from Sea to Sea: Christianity, Imperialism, and the Trope of Conversion Karen King–Aribisala: Sharing Male and Female Spaces: Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart Jamie S. Scott: “You’re Not Only Drunk But Mad”: The Ironies of Islam in Tayeb Salih’s Season of Migration to the North History and Narrative Robert Cribb: Nature Conservation and Cultural Preservation in Convergence: Orang Pendek and Papuans in Colonial Indonesia Amin Malak: Colonial Encounters or Clash of Civilizations? The Fiction of Naguib Mahfouz, Tayeb Salih, and Ahdaf Soueif Jacqueline Jondot: A British Napoleon Or, Can the Empire Strike Back? Edward Atiyah’s The Eagle Flies from the East Ursula Kluwick: The Personal and the Public: Michael Ondaatje’s Historiographic Metafiction and the Question of Political Engagement Andrea Strolz: ‘True Stories’ in the Course of Time in Margaret Atwood’s The Blind Assassin Cynthia vanden Driesen: Rewriting Europe: Carey’s Jack Maggs and Malouf’s Remembering Babylon Concepción Mengíbar–Rico: The Carnivalesque into Theatre: Carnival and Drama in the Anglophone Caribbean Language and Translation Tuomas Huttunen: Ethics, Language, and the Writing of Amitav Ghosh Clare Thake Vassallo: Identity and Instruction: Issues of Choice Between the Maltese Language and Its Others Lydia Sciriha: Different Genders, Different Conversation Styles? Patterns of Interaction Between Married Couples in Malta Judith Lütge Coullie: Translating Narrative in the New South Africa: Transition and Transformation in A Change of Tongue Notes on Contributors Index
£138.84
Brill Shared Waters: Soundings in Postcolonial Literatures
Book SynopsisThe present volume contains general essays on: unequal African/Western academic exchange; the state and structure of postcolonial studies; representing male violence in Zimbabwe’s wars; parihaka in the poetic imagination of Aotearoa New Zealand; Middle Eastern, Nigerian, Moroccan, and diasporic Indian women’s writing; community in post-Independence Maltese poetry in English; key novels of the Portuguese colonies; the TV series The Kumars at No. 42; fictional representations of India; the North in western Canadian writing; and a pedagogy of African-Canadian literature. As well as these, there is a selection of poems from Malta by Daniel Massa, Adrian Grima, Norbert Bugeja, Immanuel Mifsud, and Maria Grech Ganado, and essays providing close readings of works by the following authors and filmmakers: Thea Astley, George Elliott Clarke, Alan Duff, Francis Ebejer, Lorena Gale, Romesh Gunesekera, Sahar Khalīfah, Anthony Minghella, Michael Ondaatje, Caryl Phillips, Edgar Allan Poe, Salman Rushdie, Ghādah al-Sammān, Meera Syal, Lee Tamahori. Contributors: Leila Abouzeid, Hoda Barakat, Amrit Biswas, Thomas Bonnici, Stella Borg Barthet, Ivan Callus, Devon Campbell–Hall, Saviour Catania, George Elliott Clarke, Brian Crow, Pilar Cuder–Domínguez, Bärbel Czennia, Hilary P. Dannenberg, Pauline Dodgson–Katiyo, Bernadette Falzon, Daphne Grace, Adrian Grima, Kifah Hanna, Janne Korkka, T. Vijay Kumar, Chantal Kwast–Greff, Maureen Lynch Pèrcopo, Kevin Stephen Magri, Isabel Moutinho, Melanie A. Murray, Taiwo Oloruntoba–Oju, Gerhard Stilz, Jesús Varela Zapata, Christine Vogt–William.Table of ContentsIntroduction and Acknowledgements Projecting Postcolonialism Hoda Barakat: Exchanging – Sharing Our Places; translated from French by Carmen Depasquale Brian Crow: Exclusion and the Intellectuals: Some Thoughts on Unequal Academic Exchange Between Africa and the West Jesús Varela Zapata: What Lies Ahead: Consolidation and Diversity in Postcolonial Studies Daphne Grace: Beyond Revolution: Re-Writing Violence and the Future of Postcolonial Studies War and Remembrance Gerhard Stilz: Territorial Terrors: Colonial Spaces and Postcolonial Revisions Pauline Dodgson–Katiyo: In the Enemy’s Camp: Women Representing Male Violence in Zimbabwe’s Wars Chantal Kwast–Greff: Shared Place and Maimed Bodies: Flesh of the Past, Soul of the Future (or Vice-Versa) in Once Were Warriors Bärbel Czennia: Historical Trauma, lieu de mémoire, Source of Collective Renewal: Parihaka in the Poetic Imagination of Aotearoa New Zealand Writing Women Leila Abouzeid: Becoming a Writer in Morocco Kifah Hanna: Middle Eastern Women’s Roles Transformed: The Gendered Spaces of Ghādah al-Sammān and Sahar Khalīfah Bernadette Falzon: Going Through Twentieth-Century Malta in the Company of Francis Ebejer’s Heroines Taiwo Oloruntoba–Oju: Aesthetic (Dis)Continuities in the African Gendered Space: The Example of Younger Nigerian Women’s Writing Christine Vogt–William: Smells, Skins, and Spices: Indian Spice Shops as Gendered Diasporic Spaces in the Novels of Indian Women Writers of the Diaspora Maureen Lynch Pèrcopo: Generational Change: Women and Writing in the Novels of Thea Astley Islands and the Sea Daniel Massa, Adrian Grima, Maria Grech Ganado, Immanuel Mifsud, Norbert Bugeja: Poems from Malta Stella Borg Barthet: Currents and Swells in Maltese Identity: Representations of Community in Maltese Poetry in English Since Independence Kevin Stephen Magri: Finding Nemo: Puzzling Maltese Identity in Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Murders in the Rue Morgue” Melanie A. Murray: The Sea and the Erosion of Cultural Identity in Romesh Gunesekera’s Reef Saviour Catania and Ivan Callus: The Otherless Other, or The Anonymity of Water: Unmapping Ondaatje’s ‘Sand Sea’ Self in Minghella’s The English Patient Isabel Moutinho: The Sea and the Changing Nature of Cultural Identity Thomas Bonnici: Diaspora in Caryl Phillips’s Crossing the River (1993) Adrian Grima: “They are us”: Interview with Caryl Phillips Shared Spaces Hilary P. Dannenberg: Sharing Media Spaces: The Kumars at No. 42 Devon Campbell–Hall: Writing Second-Generation Migrant Identity in Meera Syal’s Fiction Amrit Biswas: Is ‘Sharing Places’ Viable in a Postmodern World Order? Salman Rushdie’s Novel The Ground Beneath Her Feet T. Vijay Kumar: Sharing Nation Space: Representations of India Janne Korkka: Exploring Boundaries: The North in Western Canadian Writing Pilar Cuder–Domínguez: Sharing Quebec: Lorena Gale’s Je me souviens and George Elliott Clarke’s Quebecité George Elliott Clarke: Towards a Pedagogy of African-Canadian Literature Notes on Contributors Index
£138.84
Brill Islanded Identities: Constructions of Postcolonial Cultural Insularity
Book SynopsisThe island, because of its supposed isolation, and its apparent small scale, has historically been a privileged site of colonial aggression and acquisitiveness. Yet the island has also been imagined as a uniquely sovereign space, and thus one in which the colonial enterprise can be seen as especially egregious. ‘Islandedness’ takes on a particular charge in the early twenty-first century, in the supposedly postcolonial period. While contemporary media offer a simulacrum of proximity to others, the reality is that we are ever more distant, inhabiting islands both real and conceptual. Meanwhile migrants from today’s ‘postcolonial’ islands are routinely denied access to the perceived ‘mainland’. And, in islands freed from overt colonialism, but often beset by neocolonial forces of domination and control, identities are constructed so as to differentiate insider from outsider – even when the outsider comes from within. This is the first volume devoted explicitly to the postcolonial island, conceived in a broad geographical, historical, and metaphorical sense. Branching across disciplinary parameters (literary studies, anthropology, history, cultural studies), and analyzing a range of cultural forms (literature, dance, print journalism, and television), the volume attempts to focus critically on three areas: the current realities of formerly colonized island nations; the phenomenon of ‘foreign’ communities living within a dominant host community; and the existence of (local) practices and theoretical perspectives that complement, but are often critical of, prevailing theories of the postcolonial. The islands treated in the volume include Ireland, Montserrat, Martinique, Mauritius, and East Timor, and the collection includes more broadly conceived historical and theoretical essays. The volume should be required reading for scholars working in postcolonial studies, in island studies, and for those working in and across a range of disciplines (literature, cultural studies, anthropology). Contributors: Ralph Crane, Matthew Boyd Goldie, Lyn Innes, Maeve McCusker, Paulo de Medeiros, Burkhard Schnepel, Cornelia Schnepel, Jonathan Skinner, Anthony Soares, Ritu Tyagi, Mark WehrlyTable of ContentsAcknowledgements Illustrations Introduction Matthew Boyd Goldie: Island Theory — The Antipodes Maeve McCusker: Writing Against the Tide? — Patrick Chamoiseau’s (Is)land Imaginary Jonathan Skinner: A Distinctive Disaster Literature — Montserrat Island Poetry under Pressure Ritu Tyagi: Rethinking Identity and Belonging — ‘Mauritianness’ in the Work of Ananda Devi Burkhard Schnepel and Cornelia Schnepel: From Slave to Tourist Entertainer — Performative Negotiations of Identity and Difference in Mauritius Ralph Crane: “Amid the Alien Corn” — British India as Human Island Mark Wehrly: Journalism and Identity — The Red-Top Hangover and Erosions of ‘Island Mentality’ in Postcolonial Ireland Anthony Soares: Western Blood in an Eastern Island — Affective Identities in Timor-Leste Lyn Innes: “No Man is an Island” — National Literary Canons, Writers, and Readers Paulo de Medeiros: Impure Islands — Europe and a Post-Imperial Polity Notes on Contributors Index
£90.10
Brill Une femme puissante: L’œuvre de Marie NDiaye
Book SynopsisMarie NDiaye s’impose comme l’une des voix les plus intéressantes de la littérature française contemporaine. L’obtention du prix Goncourt en novembre 2009 pour Trois femmes puissantes vient confirmer ce constat. La recherche littéraire n’a pas tardé à interroger les univers insolites de ses romans, de ses pièces de théâtre et de ses nouvelles qui semblent défier toute tentative de classification générique. Le réalisme ndiayïen agit en correcteur des formes préétablies, qui suggèrent une cohérence que la réalité n’offre pas. L’auteure refuse la parenté avec les moules des genres traditionnels et renonce à s’intégrer dans une grande et heureuse « famille » littéraire. C’est dans cette perspective que le présent ouvrage se propose de relire l’œuvre de Marie NDiaye en réfléchissant sur des sujets tels que les mécanismes d’exclusion sociale, l’étrangeté et les procédés discursifs de racialisation aussi bien que sur la dimension poétique de son écriture et sur la gestion de l’image de l’auteure et les enjeux médiatiques de sa représentation.Table of ContentsDaniel Bengsch et Cornelia Ruhe: « Perturbations inconnues » : l’Œuvre de Marie NDiaye Cornelia Ruhe: La poétique du flou de Marie NDiaye Anne Martine Parent: La nostalgie de soi : l’identité en défaut dans Autoportrait en vert de Marie NDiaye Michael Sheringham: Ambivalences de l’animalité chez Marie NDiaye Dominique Rabaté: Marie NDiaye et l’art des dérapages contrôlés Daniel Bengsch: L’incapacité à rejoindre les autres : réflexions sur la poétique du récit dans Un temps de saison Vanessa Besand: L’art de l’étrange chez Marie NDiaye : enjeux artistiques et sociaux d’une écriture singulière (La Sorcière et Mon coeur à l’étroit) Clarissa Behar: Écrire en pays à majorité blanche : En famille de Marie NDiaye Sarah Burnautzki: Jeux de visibilité et d’invisibilité : la production romanesque de Marie NDiaye à la lumière de la crise du républicanisme français Lydie Moudileno: Marie NDiaye : entre visibilité et réserve Ursula Hennigfeld: Humain, trop humain, rien d’humain : le théâtre de Marie NDiaye Abdoulaye Sylla: Le négoce de la distance : rhétorique des rapports humains dans le théâtre de Marie NDiaye Gisela Febel: Livres pour enfants et protagonistes jeunes dans l’œuvre de Marie NDiaye Ursula Link-Heer: Noms et toponymes dans l’œuvre de Marie NDiaye Andrew Asibong: Autour de la mère morte Shirley Jordan: La puissance de Khady Demba Margarete Zimmermann: Le jeu des intertextualités dans Trois femmes puissantes Christophe Ippolito: Trois contes, Trois femmes puissantes : le puzzle et l’oiseau migrateur Coordonnées bio-bibliographiques
£100.80
Brill Caribbeing: Comparing Caribbean Literatures and Cultures
Book SynopsisFrom wide-ranging overviews of the entire region to close readings of specific works, this volume opens a fascinating window on the literatures and cultures of the Caribbean, covering texts in the multiplicity of languages used in the wider Caribbean: Spanish, English, French, Dutch, Portuguese, and the region’s many creoles. Authors and works discussed range from luminaries such as Derek Walcott to hitherto practically unknown works in Antillean creole languages. Underlying is the idea to foster the study of the Caribbean literary, artistic and visual text through a comparative lens, a firm proposal to think beyond the persisting linguistic barriers and scholarly divides in the field. As such, Caribbeing: Comparing Caribbean Literatures and Cultures brings a new approach to the Caribbean embracing the region’s linguistic multiplicity and complexity without eschewing the many theoretical challenges and obstacles such a scholarly endeavor entails. Because of its ample scope this book will appeal to scholars and students working on the Caribbean and Latin America, but also to those interested in the broader fields of postcolonial and cultural studies.Trade Review"This book is much more than a book on the Caribbean: it underlines the global dimensions and relevance of Caribbean Studies in the twenty-first century. Following carefully the crossroads of literatures and cultures, it shows new routes allowing us to rethink our world(s) in a transarchipelagic mode. An eye-opener: accelerated globalization is unthinkable without the Caribbean." – Ottmar Ette, University of Potsdam "Rarely have the multiple flows and enduring traumas of Caribbean culture been explored from such a boldly wide-ranging and profoundly comparative set of perspectives. An indispensable work that sets a new standard for Caribbeanist scholarship." – Maarten van Delden, Universtiy of California, Los Angeles "Canonical Caribbean writers are read alongside less famous authors and artists, going beyond the traditional focus and incorporating music, poetry, and art into the investigation. Furthermore, there is considerable emphasis on Dutch Caribbean literature, an oeuvre often overshadowed by criticism of more prominent anglophone, francophone, and Hispanic Caribbean writers. the collection is an insightful comparative study of Caribbean literature and culture, which will be of great interest to students and scholars of the Caribbean alike." – Antonia Wimbush, University of Birmingham, in: Modern Language Review 111/3 (2016), pp. 844-846 "The analytic caliber and originality of the collection’s essays is, with few exceptions, uniformly high […] An important contribution to our area’s rewarding study, the Caribbean this collection argues for and reveals is, nonetheless, finally a region beyond geography or specific location." – Roberto Márguez, Mount Holyoke College, in: New West Indian Guide 90 (2016), pp. 170-172Table of Contents“Introduction: Caribbeing – Setting a New Comparative Agenda for Caribbean Studies”, Kristian Van Haesendonck: I. Going Global 1. “Old” and “New” Caribbeans “Going Caribbean, Going Global”, Theo D’haen: “The ‘Dutch Period’: A Missing Link in Caribbean Cultural History”, Ineke Phaf-Rheinberger: 2. Caribbeing: Creolizing Identities “The Panama Canal in the Work of Eric Walrond and Joaquín Beleño: Counterpoint between the Caribbean Diaspora and Luis Pulido Ritter:the Panamanian Nation”, “Creative and Destructive Powers of Shame: Moulding Caribbean Writing and Ideology”, Aart G. Broek: “Memory of Trauma and Trauma of Memory in the Literary and Cinematographic Works of Patrick Chamoiseau”, Savrina Chinien: “The Cultural Fragmentation of Cinematic Vodou”, Christian Remse: 3. Caribbeing: Creolizing Spaces “Caribbean New York: Uncanny Urban Space”, Erica L. Johnson: “Geographical Embodiments: Re-making Urban Caribbean Cartographies through Art from Santo Domingo, Dominican Carlos Garrido Castellano: Republic”, “Glittering Sea or Mirage: Alternative Visions of the Caribbean Environment”, Jesús Varela-Zapata: “The Sugar Plantation as a Place of Caribbean Identity: A Literary Focus”, Giulia De Sarlo: II. Comparing Caribbeans 1. (En)Gendering Caribbean Textualities “The Origins of Man: Contemporary Literary Representations of Masculinity in the Caribbean”, Wendy McMahon: “Lost Daughters of the Caribbean: Constructions of Identity by Hispanic and Francophone Women in the Caribbean Diaspora”, Mary Louise Babineau: “‘This Those Slaves Must Have Known Who Were My Mothers’: Women Who Live by Their Own Rules in Dionne Brand’s Land to Light On”, Shoshannah Ganz and Stephanie McKenzie: “Burning Landscapes, Islands on Fire: Marie-Elena John’s Unburnable and Jean Rhys’ Wide Sargasso Sea”, Manuela Esposito: 2. Opening up the Archive “Shattered Heads: On the Earliest Dutch West Indian Migrant’s Text”, Michiel van Kempen: “The (Re)writing of Slavery’s Archives in Patrick Chamoiseau”, Eurídice Figueiredo: “Atrocity, Recollected”, Greg Mullins: 3. Translation/Transnation “The Real Yu Di Korsou: Migrant Construction of Curaçaoan Cultural Identity through Performance”, Guiselle Starink-Martha: “Representation, Translation and Cross-culturalism in Macunaima and The Ventriloquist’s Tale”, Miguel Nenevé and Roseli Siepamann: “‘Toute parole est une terre’: Translating the Poetics of Édouard Glissant and Derek Walcott”, Claire Bisdorff: Notes on Contributors Index of Names
£107.13
Brill Tracing the New Indian Diaspora
Book SynopsisThe growing importance of the Indian diaspora is felt today across the globe due to its emergence as the second-largest dias¬poric community. By examining historical, socio-cultural, economic, political, and lite¬rary aspects of the Indian diaspora, this volume sets out to trace the latest devel¬opments in the field of Indian diaspora studies. It brings together essays by Indian and foreign scholars, thus providing an authoritative platform for discussions in which identities and affiliations are con¬tested and constituted through the hier¬archies of cross-cultural migration in this increasingly globalized world. This volume traces the transnational network of the Indian diaspora, and will prove of interest to scholars working in the fields of the Indian diaspora, diaspora theory, and cultural studies. Countries covered include Mauritius, Fiji, Singapore, Trinidad & Tobago, Guyana, Suriname, the UK, Ireland, the USA, Canada, Malaya, South Africa, and New Zealand. Creative writers dis¬cussed include Ramabai Espinet, Vikram Chandra, Rohinton Mistry, Chitra Banerjee Diva¬karuni, Nisha Ganatra, Jhumpa Lahiri, Kavery Nambisan, and Sarita Mandanna, along with the work of filmmakers (Mira Nair, Yash Chopra, Kabir Khan, Shuchi Kothari, Mandrika Rupa, Karan Johar, Sugu Pillay, Mallika Krishnamurthy, and Nisha Ganatra).Trade Review"Wideranging and scholarly. Dwivedi’s edited collection on routes and representations of the Indian diaspora is a vital contribution to the growing critical discourse on this subject." – Professor Janet Wilson, Northampton University "Tracing the New Indian Diaspora is a significant contribution to the understanding of the positions and representations of the Indian diaspora, forcing us to re-examine our notions of location and dislocation, of home and the world, of belonging and alienation: in short, of the politics of the diaspora today." – Professor G.J.V. Prasad, Jawaharlal Nehru UniversityTable of ContentsAcknowledgements “Introducing the New Indian Diaspora”, Om Prakash Dwivedi Tracing the Indian Diaspora “The Political PIO: Thoughts on the Political Impact of the Indian Diaspora”, Pierre Gottschlich “Hambakhaya! Hambauyee Bombay! [Go Home! Go to Bombay!] – Challenges Facing South African Indians in the Post-Apartheid Era”, Brij Maharaj “Indians in Malaysia, 1900–2010: Different Migration Streams, One Diaspora”, Amarji T Kaur “The New Irish? Indian Diasporas in Ireland”, Louise Harrington “Giving Back to India: Investment Opportunities and Challenges”, Anjali Sahay “Certain Allegiances, Uncertain Identities: The Fraught Struggles of Dalits in Britain”, Meena Dhanda “The Indian Diaspora in New Zealand: Identities and Cultural Representations”, Wardlow Friesen “Finding Refuge in Culture: Race, Place, and Immigrant Identity in the Indian Diaspora”, Sunil Bhatia “In Search of the ‘Children of the Wind’: A Journey to Chattisgarh”, Brij V. Lal Literary Representations of the Indian Diaspora “The Ecology of Disaster: A Reading of Divakaruni’s One Amazing Thing”, Chitra Sankaran “Representations Juxtaposed: A Home Author and a Diasporic Author Depict Coorg”, Lisa Lau “Love and Longing for Mumbai: Vikram Chandra’s Fiction and Bollywood Cinema”, Mari A Ridda “Rifts and Riffs, Roots and Routes: Ramabai Espinet’s The Swinging Bridge”, Judith Misrahi–Barak “Boundary-Marking in the Diaspora: An Analysis of Women Characters in Rohinton Mistry’s Family Matters”, Uma Jayaraman “A Home of One’s Own: Gender, Family, and Nation in Indian-American Literature and Film”, Pranav Jani Notes on Contributors
£100.94
Brill Writing and Translating Francophone Discourse: Africa, The Caribbean, Diaspora
Book SynopsisThis book is a much needed contribution to interdisciplinary research on the intersection of French and Francophone Studies and Translation Studies. It highlights the symbiotic relationship between the two disciplines whereby theories and concepts developed in translation studies provide useful models and paradigms for studying francophone literature, while major concepts that hold sway in the francophone world provide a solid basis for elucidating and understanding translation phenomena. The book is at once a contribution to the growing field of postcolonial francophone studies and the sub-area of postcolonial translation theory. Contributors are experts from a variety of disciplines and hail from various regions across the globe. What unites them is their interest in translation and its conceptualization both as an interlinguistic practice and a metaphor for intercultural communication and transcultural relations. The contributions draw on literature, film, historical documents and critical theories by French and francophone thinkers, highlighting the significance of translation for African, Caribbean and migrant francophone discourse.Trade Review“This edited collection takes an interdisciplinary approach to the study of texts in the francophone African and Caribbean world, drawing on theories and concepts from francophone postcolonial studies, translation studies and related fields. The essays are diverse in terms of subject matter, from the “semiotics of the hyphen” to the translation and communication of the history of the Basotho people, and they focus not only on written literature and philosophy but also orality and film. [...] Édouard Glissant’s Poétique de la Relation is used as a point of departure for many of the essays, which form a culturally, linguistically and geographically diverse collection. […] this is a fascinating compilation of essays that engage with philosophical, metaphorical and practical translation issues and take a unique and multidisciplinary approach to our understanding of cultural communication across space and time in relation to the Caribbean, Africa and its diaspora.” - Georgina Collins, University of Glasgow, in: Translation Studies 9.3 (2016), pp.327-329Table of ContentsAcknowledgements “Introduction”, Paul F. Bandia “From the French Antilles to the Caribbean: ‘Translation’ within the Francophone Realm”, Lieven D’hulst “A ‘Flavor of Diversity’: Intercreation and the Making of a Mosaic-Whole”, Christine Raguet “Édouard Glissant and the Imagination of World Literature: Relation, Creolization and Translation”, Sandra L. Bermann “Semiotics of the Hyphen in Patrick Chamoiseau’s Biblique des Derniers Gestes”, Samia Kassab-Charfi “Mapping ‘Tout-monde’”, Tom Conley “Translating the Other’s Voice: When Is Too Much Too Much?”, Marie-José Nzengou-Tayo and Elizabeth Wilson “The Language of the Stranger: A Dialogue between Jacques Derrida and Abdelkébir Khatibi on Language and Translation”, Réda Bensmaïa “Vernacular Monolingualism and Translation in West African Popular Film”, Moradewun Adejunmobi “Rabah Ameur-Zaïmeche: Translation as Artistic Practice”, Verena Andermatt Conley “In a Free State? Translation and the Basotho: From Eugene Casalis to Antje Krog”, Alain Ricard Notes on Contributors Index
£68.00
Brill Transculturation and Aesthetics: Ambivalence, Power, and Literature
Book SynopsisThis collection is a timely reflection on the momentous concept of transculturalism. With its historical roots in globalization, transculturation, oriented to (new) aesthetics, seeks new cultural formations, and, with its heterogeneous author- and readership, enlists active participation by the individual. The volume focuses on the interplay between and lapses within interrelated domains of study – postcolonial, diaspora, and world-literary – which attend to the material and discursive circumstances of the literary work. The various readings argue for a situated mode of reading that attends to literary meaning emerging from transaction across, struggle between, and appropriation of cultures, both intra- and internationally, and, by definition, not tied exclusively to a colonial historical paradigm. The overarching themes – ambivalence, power, and literature – are approached transculturally and aesthetically with four distinct concerns in mind: theorization of transculturation; diaspora and migration; the African legacies of colonial slavery and its global aftermath; and localized topics that diversify the interpretation and definition of transculturation and its relation to an (emerging) aesthetic that goes beyond nationally constrained (geographical, cultural, linguistic, literary, etc.) boundaries. Themes range from literary representations of archaeological sites to the contest over meaning that follow efforts to exhume the past, from the ethics of queer love in diaspora to the effects of global literary marketing, from the development of transcultural identities in the colonial encounter to domestication and foreignization in the translation of Aboriginal texts. Authors discussed include Michael Ondaatje, Vernon Anderson, Barry Unsworth, Salman Rushdie, Yvonne Vera, Chiang Hsun, Sally Morgan, Doris Pilkington, Sarfraz Manzoor, Sathnam Sanghera, Yasmin Hai, Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o, Timothy Wangusa, Fred D’Aguiar, Amitav Ghosh, and Jack Kerouac.Table of ContentsAcknowledgements Erik Falk and Joel Kuortti: Introduction I. Theorizing Transculturation Gesa Mackenthun: Digging Far and Deep: Archaeological Sites, Dislocations, and Heterotopoi in Postcolonial Writing Joel Kuortti: Salman Rushdie’s Transcultural ‘Jesture’ in The Enchantress of Florence II. Diasporic and Immigrant Literatures Erik Falk: Transculturation, Postcolonial Literature, and the Global Literary Market: The Case of Yvonne Vera’s American Literary Career Fred Chih-Wei Chang: The Erotics of Queer Diaspora in Chiang Hsun’s Yu ai shu: xie gei Ly’s M (Epistles of Eros: Letters to Ly’s M) Ulla Rahbek: Dual Lives? Constructing Individuality in Contemporary British Multicultural Memoirs III. African Legacies Dominica Dipio: Negotiating Transcultural Identities in African Literature: Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o’s The River Between and Timothy Wangusa’s Upon This Mountain Vicki Briault Manus: The Aesthetics of Indigenization in Post-Apartheid Black South African Literature Željka Švrljuga: “In this time brown did not stick around”: Fred D’Aguiar’s Poetics of Slavery IV. Localized Readings Danica Čerče and Oliver Haag: Australian Aboriginal Literature on the European Market Arnaud Barras: The Aesthetics of the Tide: The Ecosystem as Matrix for Transculturation in Amitav Ghosh’s The Hungry Tide Michael J. Prince: “Whither goest thou, America?” Deterritorialization, Identity, and the Fellahin Ideal in Jack Kerouac’s On the Road Notes on Contributors Index
£72.00
Ian Randle Publishers,Jamaica The George Lamming Reader: The Aesthetics of Decolonisation
Book SynopsisGeorge Lamming is one of the best known, certainly one of the most highly regarded contemporary writers from the Caribbean. Spanning nearly 60 years and encompassing fiction, poetry and critical essays, Lamming's writing covers the length and breadth of Caribbean intellectual, cultural, political and literary life. Credited as a part of that group of Caribbean activists who awoke the Caribbean to its identity and more specifically to its cultural identity, his works have focused on finding new political and social identity. Indeed, Lamming was a seminal figure in the Caribbean 20th century intellectual tradition and radical anti-colonial tradition. Lamming is best known for his novels. In the Castle of My Skin and The Emigrants take place in England and are largely autobiographical. Of Age and Innocence and Season of Adventure are set on the fictional Caribbean island of San Cristobal. In Water with Berries, the plot of Shakespeare's The Tempest is used to unmask the imperfections of West Indian society while his final novel, Natives of My Person, gives account of the voyage of a slave-trading ship on the triangular trade route from Europe to Africa to the New World colonies. In The Aesthetics of Decolonisation, friend and colleague Anthony Bogues pulls together Lamming's critical works, some previously published, some given as addresses, lectures and interviews. This is accompanied by critical reflections on Lamming's work by noted scholars such as Andaiye and Sandra Pouchet Paquet. This much needed reader on Lamming and his work examines the history of the Caribbean and the categories which continue to shape and influence Caribbean identity in our contemporary world.
£28.96
Bloomsbury Publishing (UK) Joseph Conrad Three Novels Heart of Darkness The Secret Agent and The Shadow Line
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£36.99
Bloomsbury Publishing (UK) Jean Rhys Women Writers
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£31.99
Taylor & Francis Ltd Transcending the Postmodern The Singular Response
Book SynopsisTranscending the Postmodern: The Singular Response of Literature to the Transmodern Paradigm gathers an introduction and ten chapters concerned with the issue of Transmodernity as addressed by and presented in contemporary novels hailing from various parts of the English-speaking world. Building on the theories of Transmodernity propounded by Rosa MarÃa RodrÃguez Magda, Enrique Dussel, Marc Luyckx Ghisi and Irena Ateljevic, inter alia, it investigates the links between Transmodernity and such categories as Postmodernity, Postcolonialism and Transculturalism with a view to help define a new current in contemporary literary production. The chapters either follow the main theoretical drives of the transmodern paradigm or problematise them. In so doing, they branch out towards various issues that have come to inspire contemporary novelists, among which: the presence of the past, the ascendance of new technologies, multiculturalism, terrorism, and also vulnerability, interdependence, solidarity and ecology in a globalised context. In so doing, it interrogates the ethics, aesthetics and politics of the contemporary novel in English. Trade Review"This book stands out as an unyielding and timely repositioning of paradigms in the domains of philosophy, aesthetics, literary criticism and cultural theory through the lens of contemporary literature in English…the ten chapters of the book succeed in producing a close view of how themes such as postcolonialism, subalternity, eco-criticism, feminist criticism, etc. fall into the transmodern pattern." Sorin Cazacu, University of Craiova, British and American StudiesTable of ContentsIntroduction: Transcending the PostmodernSusana Onega and Jean-Michel GanteauPART IThe Poetics of Transmodernity The Transmodern Poetics of David Mitchell’s Cloud Atlas: Generic Hybridity, Narrative Embedding and Transindividuality Susana Onega Transnational Latino/a Literature and the Transmodern Meta-Narrative: An Alternative Reading of Junot Díaz’s The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao Sara Villamarín-Freire The Novel of Ideas at the Crossroads of Transmodernity: Tom McCarthy’s Satin Island Angelo Monaco PART II Ethical Perceptions Problematising the Transmodern: Jon McGregor’s Ethics of Consideration Jean-Michel Ganteau Using Transculturalism to Understand the Transmodern Paradigm: Representations of Identity in Zadie Smith’s White Teeth and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s Americanah Matthias Stephan Transmodern Mythopoesis in Kazuo Ishiguro’s The Buried Giant Laura Colombino PART III Migrancy and the Possibility of Re-enchantment A Transmodern Approach to Post-9/11 Australia: Richard Flanagan’s The Unknown Terrorist as a Narrative of the Limit Bárbara Arizti Diversity, Singularity, Re-Enchantment and Relationality in a Transmodern World: Arundhati Roy’s The Ministry of Utmost Happiness Merve Sarıkaya-Şen PART IV Perspectives on Biopolitics Transcorporeality, Fluidity and Transanimality in Monique Roffey’s Novel Archipelago Julia Kuznetski A Transmodern Approach to Biology in Naomi Mitchison’s Memoirs of a Spacewoman Jessica Aliaga-Lavrijsen
£128.25
Edinburgh University Press Medieval Literature and Postcolonial Studies
Book SynopsisMedieval Literature and Postcolonial Studies provides a comprehensive introduction to the field of postcolonial medieval studies and examines the historical connections between postcolonial studies and medieval studies.Trade ReviewWritten for the prestigious series edited by David Johnson and Ania Loomba, this book will enable a wider audience to get a broad view of the extraordinarily fertile field of pre-modern literature and culture: it sets out clearly the ways in which the intersection of ethnic, racial, and religious difference in the pre-modern setting can provide valuable insights into modern postcolonial theory. Lisa Lampert-Weissig's book is sure to have a dramatic impact on medieval and early modern studies, and on the much broader fields of postcolonial theory and literary history. -- Professor Suzanne Conklin Akbari, Department of English and Medieval Studies, University of Toronto Lisa Lampert-Weissig persuasively argues both that postcolonial studies can illuminate our understanding of medieval Europe's centuries of invasion and conquest, and that medieval literary sources can refine key concepts in postcolonial studies. In her lucid and challenging readings of medieval texts and contemporary postcolonial novels, Lampert shows that the ways in which the Middle Ages features in contemporary debates about postcolonial nations struggling out of their past or about 'Islam in Europe' are far from merely academic. We need books like this to remind us of the medieval roots of histories of modernity, 'race' and European identity. -- Professor Ruth Evans, Department of English, Saint Louis University Highly recommended Written for the prestigious series edited by David Johnson and Ania Loomba, this book will enable a wider audience to get a broad view of the extraordinarily fertile field of pre-modern literature and culture: it sets out clearly the ways in which the intersection of ethnic, racial, and religious difference in the pre-modern setting can provide valuable insights into modern postcolonial theory. Lisa Lampert-Weissig's book is sure to have a dramatic impact on medieval and early modern studies, and on the much broader fields of postcolonial theory and literary history. Lisa Lampert-Weissig persuasively argues both that postcolonial studies can illuminate our understanding of medieval Europe's centuries of invasion and conquest, and that medieval literary sources can refine key concepts in postcolonial studies. In her lucid and challenging readings of medieval texts and contemporary postcolonial novels, Lampert shows that the ways in which the Middle Ages features in contemporary debates about postcolonial nations struggling out of their past or about 'Islam in Europe' are far from merely academic. We need books like this to remind us of the medieval roots of histories of modernity, 'race' and European identity.Table of ContentsSeries Preface; Illustrations; Acknowledgements; Timeline; Prologue; I. The Future of the Past; II. Medieval Intersections: The Case of al-Andalus; Norman Frontiers and the Twelfth-Century Werewolf Renaissance; Race, Periodisation and Medieval Romance; A Global Vision: The Travels of Sir John Mandeville; III. The Dark Continent of Europe; Works Cited; Further Reading; Index.
£22.79
Edinburgh University Press Modernist Literature and Postcolonial Studies
Book SynopsisThis book provides a fresh account of modernist writing in a perspective based on the reading strategies developed by postcolonial studies.
£22.79
Edinburgh University Press Romantic Literature and Postcolonial Studies
Book SynopsisExamines the relationship between Romantic writing and the rapidly expanding British Empire. This title explains how key theoretical concerns of postcolonial studies - imaginary geography, Otherness and difference and cultural hybridity - have dramatically changed our understanding of Romantic literature.
£22.79
Edinburgh University Press A Historical Companion to Postcolonial
Book SynopsisThe first reference work to provide an integrated and authoritative body of information about the political, cultural and economic contexts of postcolonial literatures that have their provenance in the major European Empires of Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, The Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, Latin America and the Philippines.Table of ContentsPreface, Walter Mignolo; INTRODUCTION, Prem Poddar, Rajeev Patke, Lars Jensen; Acknowledgements; General editors & section editors; List of maps; Map 1: World Colonisation 1550; A selective chronology; Map 2: World Colonisation 1914; BELGIUM & ITS COLONIES; Map 3: The Belgian Colonial Empire; Introduction, Pierre-Philippe Fraiture (University of Warwick); Anthropology & Ethnography, Maarten Couttenier (Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium); Anticolonial Resistance, Carina Yervasi (Swarthmore College); Belgian Imperial Policy, Martin Shipway (Birkbeck College, University of London); Belgian Missionaries in the Congo, Pascale Stacey (Liverpool University); Colonial & Postcolonial Exhibitions, Sabine Cornelis (Royal Museum of Central Africa, Brussels); Comics & the Belgian Congo, Nancy Hunt (Michigan University); Evolues, Priscilla Ringrose (Trondheim University); Historiography: The Belgian Congo, Pascale Stacey & Victoria Reid (Liverpool University); Kimbangu, Anne Melice (Liege University); Leopold II, Lieve Spaas (Kingston University, London); Missions in the Danish-Norwegian colonies, Louise Sebro (Lund University); Mobutu, Priscilla Appama (Universit de Franche-Comt, Besanon, France); Narratives of Empire: Postcolonial Congo, Pierre Halen (Paul Verlaine-Metz University); The Red Rubber Scandal, Aisling Campbell (Liverpool University); The Rwanda Genocide of the 1990s, Colette Braeckman (Brussels); Andre Ryckmans, Heidi Bojsen (Roskilde University); Pierre Ryckmans, Therese De Raedt (Utah University); The Scramble for the Congo, Colette Braeckman (Brussels); Tippu Tip, Fiona Barclay (University of Glasgow); DENMARK AND ITS COLONIES; Map 4: Denmark and Norway: Colonial Possessions c.1800; Introduction, Lars Jensen (Roskilde University); Abolition of Slavery, Lars Jensen (Roskilde University); Anthropology, Greenland and Colonialism, Ole Hoiris (Aarhus University); Charter Companies, Lars Jensen (Roskilde University); Colonial Exhibitions, Cheralyn Mealor (Aarhus University); Creolisation, Heidi Bojsen (Roskilde University); The Greenlandic Colonial Administration, Mette Ronsager (Copenhagen University); Greenlandic Writers, Karen Langgard (University of Greenland); Grundtvig, N.F.S., Lars Jensen (Roskilde University); Thorkild Hansen and the Critique of Empire, Marianne Stecher-Hansen (University of Washington); Historiography, Michael Bregnsbo (University of Southern Denmark); Home Rule, Lars Jensen (Roskilde University); Migrancy, Kirsten Hvenegard-Lassen (Roskilde University); Missions in the Danish-Norwegian Colonies, Louise Sebro (Lund University); Modernisation of Greenland, Klaus Georg Hansen (Nuuk); Narratives and Fictions of Empire, Claire Thomson (University College, London); Orientalism and Exoticism, John Botofte (Brussels); Race and Ethnicity, Greenland, Karen Langgard (University of Greenland); Knud Rasmussen, Nanna Folke Olsen (Copenhagen); Thule, Pia Kruger Johansen (Roskilde University); Tropical Colonies, Esther Fihl (Copenhagen Unversity); Viking Settlements, Lasse Wolsgard(Copenhagen); FRANCE AND ITS COLONIES; Map 5: The French Colonial Empire; Introduction, Charles Forsdick (Liverpool University); The Algerian War, Nicholas Harrison (King's College); Anthropology and Ethnography, Pierre-Philippe Fraiture (University of Warwick); Anti-colonialism, Andy Stafford (University of Leeds); Colonial Administration, Tony Chafer (University of Portsmouth); Colonial Education, Claire Griffiths (University of Hull); Creolisation and Creoleness, Maeve McCusker (Queen's University); Decolonization, Stephen Tyre (University of St Andrews); Exploration and Travel, Aedin Ni Loingsigh (University of Edinburgh); France in Asia and the Indian Ocean, Kate Marsh (Liverpool University); France in North America, Bill Marshall (University of Glasgow); France in the South Pacific, Amanda Macdonald (University of Queensland); Francophone, Margaret A. Majumdar (University of Portsmouth); Francophone Black Atlantic, H. Adlai Murdoch (University of Illinois); Francophone Caribbean, Martin Munro (University of the West Indies); Haiti, Mariana Past (Dickinson College); Historiography, Stephen Tyre (University of St Andrews); Imperial Policy, Tony Chafer (University of Portsmouth); Internal Colonialism, Eamon O Ciosain (National University of Ireland); Massacres, Charles Forsdick, (Liverpool University), Migrancy, Aedin Ni Loingsigh (University of Edinburgh); Narratives and Fictions of Empire, David Murphy (University of Stirling); Negritude, Patrick Corcoran (Roehampton University); Neo-colonialism, Andy Stafford (University of Leeds); North Africa and the Middle East, Patrick Crowley (University College, Cork); Orientalism and Exoticism, Siobhan Shilton (Bristol University); Race and Ethnicity, Andy Stafford (University of Leeds); Religion, Kamal Salhi (University of Leeds); Slavery and Abolition, Maeve McCusker (Queen's University, Belfast); Sub-Saharan Africa, David Murphy (University of Stirling); Tirailleurs Senegalais, Charles Forsdick (Liverpool University); Women's Histories, Winifred Woodhull (University of California at San Diego); GERMANY AND ITS COLONIES; Map 6: The German Colonies; Introduction, Birthe Kundrus (Hamburger Institut fur Sozialforschung); African Playground, Nana Badenberg (Basel); Anthropology and Ethnography, H. Glenn Penny (University of Iowa); Anti-colonial Struggles, Tanja Buhrer (Universitat Bern); Askari and Askari Myth, Michelle Moyd (Ithaca); Berlin Conference, Tanja Buhrer (Universitat Bern); Black Germans, Eve Rosenhaft (University of Liverpool); Cameroon, Ralph A. Austen (University of Chicago); Colonial Administration, Jurgen Zimmerer (University of Sheffield); Colonial Culture-Impact on Germany, Alexander Honold (Universitat Basel); Colonial Education, Sven Werkmeister (Humboldt-Universitat zu Berlin); Colonial Literature, Alexander Honold (Universitat Basel); Colonial Migration and the Law, Pascal Grosse (Universitatsmedizin, Berlin); Colonial Monuments, Joachim Zeller (Berlin); Colonial Revisionism, Susann Lewerenz (Hamburg); Colonialism and African Writing, Nina Berman (Ohio State University); Commercial Ethnographic Exhibitions, Hilke Thode-Arora (Markt Schwaben); German East Africa, Christian Geulen (Universitat Koblenz-Landau); German New Guinea, Birthe Kundrus (Hamburger Institut fur Sozialforschung); German Samoa, Birthe Kundrus (Hamburger Institut fur Sozialforschung); German South-west Africa, Daniel J. Walther (Wartburg College); Herero Genocide, Jurgen Zimmerer (University of Sheffield); Historiography: Germany, Sebastian Conrad (Friedrich-Meinecke-Institut); Hybridity and Race Relations, Frank Becker (Historisches Seminar, Munster); Kiaochow, Klaus Mulhahn (University of Turku); The Language Question, Sven Werkmeister (Humboldt-Universitat zu Berlin); Missions, Ulrich van der Heyden (Humboldt-Universitat zu Berlin), NS-Colonialism, Dirk van Laak (Weimar); Orientalism, Nina Berman (Ohio State University); Race and Ethnicity, Michael Schubert (Universitat Osnabruck); Slavery, the Slave Trade and Abolition, J.-G. Deutsch and M. Zeuske (Universitat zu Koln); Togo, Peter Sebald (Berlin); TheVersailles Conference, Boris Barth (Universitat Konstanz); West Africa: 17th-18th Century, Ulrich van der Heyden (Humboldt-Universitat zu Berlin); Women's Histories, Lora Wildenthal (Rice University); ITALY AND ITS COLONIES; Map 7: The Italian Colonies 1940; Introduction, Ruth Ben-Ghiat (New York University); Adwa, Alessandro Triulzi (Istituto Orientale, Naples); Albania, Nicola Mai (London Metropolitan University); Anthropology and Ethnology, Barbara Sorgoni (Universita Federico II); Anti-colonial Resistance in Eastern Libya, Ali Abdullah Ahmida (University of New England); Anti-colonial Resistance in Italian East Africa, Ruth Iyob (Washington University); Dodecanese Islands, Nicholas Doumanis (University of South Wales); Eritrea to 1935, Tekaeste Negash (Dalarna University); Ethiopian War, Nicola Labanca (Siena University); Fictions and Narratives of Empire, Charles Burdett (Bristol University); Antonio Gramsci and the Southern Question, Nelson Moe (Barnard College); Rodolfo Graziani, Nicola Labanca (Siena University); Haile Selassie, William R. Scott (Lehigh University); Immigration, Jacqueline Andall (Bath Unversity); Italian East Africa, Ruth Iyob (Washington University); Italophone Literature, Cristina Lombardi-Diop (American University in Rome); Land Expropriations, Federico Cresti (Catania University); Land Settlements, Federico Cresti (Catania University); Libya, Mia Fuller (University of California at Berkeley); Orientalism, Cristina Lombardi-Diop (American University in Rome); Racial Policies, Barbara Sorgoni (Universita Federico II); The Sanusi Order or Sanusiyya, 1837-1932, Ali Abdullah Ahmida (University of New England); Somalia before 1935, Tekeste Negash (Dalarna University); Women's Histories, Ruth Iyob (Washington University); THE NETHERLANDS AND ITS COLONIES; Map 8: The Dutch Colonial Empire; Introduction, Luc Allofs (Museum of Aruba), Annemarie van Niekerk (University of the Free State), Reinier Salverda (Fryske Akademy) and Theo D'haen (University of Leiden); Anthropology and Ethnography, Reinier Salverda (Fryske Akademy) and Patricia Krus (University of Stirling); Anti-colonial Resistance, Reinier Salverda (Fryske Akademy) and Annemarie van Niekerk (University of the Free State); Edgar Cairo, Wim Rutgers (University of Aruba); Colonial Administration, Reinier Salverda (Fryske Akademy) and Patricia Krus (University of Stirling); Counts of Orange, Eric Martone (Waterbury); Creolisation and Creoleness, Reinier Salverda (Fryske Akademy), Patricia Krus (University of Stirling) and Annemarie van Niekerk (University of the Free State); Critique of Imperialism/Anti-colonialism, Reinier Salverda (Fryske Akademy) and Annemarie van Niekerk (University of the Free State); December Killings, Patricia Krus (University of Stirling); Decolonisation, Reinier Salverda (Fryske Akademy) and Patricia Krus (University of Stirling); The Dutch Colonisation of N. America J. P. Alessi (Colorado Springs); The Dutch in Brazil, Mark Meuwese (Winnipeg University); The Dutch in Colonial America, Richard C. Kagan (Hamline University); The Dutch in Taiwan, Richard C. Kagan (Hamline University); The Dutch in the Caribbean, Wim Rutgers (University of Aruba); Albert Helman, Wim Rutgers (University of Aruba); Historiography, Reinier Salverda (Fryske Akademy), P. Krus and Annemarie van Niekerk (University of the Free State); Immigration in the Netherlands, Jeroen Doomernik (University of Amsterdam); Missionaries and Religion, Reinier Salverda (Fryske Akademy) and Wim Rutgers (University of Aruba); Narratives of Empire, Reinier Salverda (Fryske Akademy), Wim Rutgers (University of Aruba) and Annemarie van Niekerk (University of the Free State); Nationalism/Nationhood, Reinier Salverda (Fryske Akademy) and Patricia Krus (University of Stirling); Orientalism/Exoticism, Reinier Salverda (Fryske Akademy) and Wim Rutgers (University of Aruba); Race and Ethnicity, Reinier Salverda (Fryske Akademy) and Patricia Krus (University of Stirling); Race and Language in South Africa, Annemarie van Niekerk (University of the Free State); Slavery and Abolition, Reinier Salverda (Fryske Akademy) and P. Krus; Women's Histories, Reinier Salverda (Fryske Akademy), Patricia Krus (University of Stirling), Annemarie van Niekerk (University of the Free State); OTHER EUROPES; Clash of Civilisations, Couze Venn (Nottingham Trent University); The Jewish Diaspora, Ilan Pappe (Haifa University); Postcolonial Russia, Ewa Thompson (Rice University); Postcolonial Sweden, Sheila Ghose (New York University); Turkey, Hamit Bozarslan (EHESS); PORTUGAL AND ITS COLONIES; Map 9: The Portuguese Colonial Empire 1415-1999; Introduction, Phillip Rothwell (Rutgers University); Anthropology and Ethnography, Miguel Vale de Almeida (Lisbon University); Anti-Colonial Struggles, David Robinson (University of Western Australia); The Brazilian Independence Process, Claire Williams (Liverpool University); Amilcar Cabral, Claire Williams (Liverpool University); The Carnation Revolution, Kathryn Bishop-Sanchez (Wisconsin University); Charter Companies/Prazos, Corrado Tornimbeni (Bologna University); Creolisation and Creoleness, David Brookshaw (Bristol University); Explorations and Discoveries, Isabel Moutinho (La Trobe University); FRELIMO (Mozambique), David Robinson (University of Western Australia); FRETILIN and Xanana Gusmao, Anthony Soares (Belfast University); The Frontline States, David Robinson (University of Western Australia); Goa, Claire Williams (Liverpool University); Henry the Navigator, Kathryn Bishop-Sanchez (Wisconsin University); Historiography, Phillip Rothwell (Rutgers University); Independence Movements (Azores and Madeira), Carmen Maria, Ramos Villar (Sheffield University); The Liberation Wars and Decolonisation, Norrie MacQueen (Dundee University); Lusophone African Literature, Russell Hamilton (Vanderbilt University); Lusotropicalism, Race and Ethnicity, Anna Klobucka (University of Massachusetts); Samora Machel, Branwen Gruffydd Jones (Aberdeen University); Eduardo Mondlane, Branwen Gruffydd Jones (Aberdeen University); Moorish Portugal, Kathryn Bishop-Sanchez (Wisconsin University); MPLA (Angola), Helia Santos (Coimbra University); Agostinho Neto, Branwen Gruffydd Jones (Aberdeen University); Orientalism in the Lusophone World, Ana Maria Mao-de Ferro Martinho (Lisbon Nova University); Overseas Provinces/The Colonial Act, Robert Moser (Georgia University); PAIGC (Guinea-Bissau and Cape Verde); Claire Williams (Liverpool University); Pepetela, Igor Cusack (Birmingham University); Postcolonial African Immigration to Portugal, Sheila Khan (Belfast University); RENAMO (Mozambique), David Robinson (University of Western Australia); Salazar and the New State, Victor J. Mendes (University of Massachusetts); Dom Sebastiao, Phillip Rothwell (Rutgers University); Slavery and Abolition, David Brookshaw (Bristol University); Timor and Indonesia: Shared currents, Anthony Soares (Belfast University); UNITA (Angola), Helia Santos (Coimbra University); Vasco da Gama, Claire Williams (Liverpool University); Women's Histories, Hilary Owen (Manchester University); Map 10: The Iberian Empires 1581-1640; SPAIN. LATIN AMERICA AND THE PHILIPPINES; Map 11: The Spanish Colonial Empire; Introduction, Elizabeth Monasterios (University of Pittsburgh); The Andean Avant-Garde, Elizabeth Monasterios (University of Pittsburgh); Andean Textiles, Denise Arnold (Instituto de Lengua y Cultura Aymara); Anti-colonial Struggle, Arturo Arias (University of Redlands); Arturo Borda, Elizabeth Monasterios (University of Pittsburgh); 'Caliban', John Beverley (University of Pittsburgh); Christian Influences on Philippine Society, Dante L. Ambrosio (University of the Philippines); Colonial Baroque, John Beverley (University of Pittsburgh); Colonialism and Popular Culture, Denise Arnold (Instituto de Lengua y Cultura Aymara); Discovery and Conquest, Gonzalo Lamana (University of Pittsburgh); Uriel Garcia, Elizabeth Monasterios (University of Pittsburgh); Hibridacion, Joshua Lund (University of Pittsburgh); Indigeneity, Gustavo Verdesio (University of Michigan); Indigenismo and Mestisaje, Javier Sanjines (University of Michigan); Latin American Critical Thought, Michael Handelsman (University of Tennessee); Marianisation in the Philippines, Evelyn A. Miranda (University of the Philippines); Marronage and Rebellion, Juan Antonio Hernandez (Cornell University); The Philippines-Mexico Connection, Jaime Veneracion (University of the Philippines); The Popol Vuj, Carlos Lopez (Marshall University); Postcoloniality and Alternative Histories, Julia Suarez Krabbe (Roskilde University); Fausto Reinaga, Marcia Stephenson (Purdue University); The Role of Literature in Filipino Resistance, Maria Luisa T. Reyes (University of the Philippines); Spain, Modernity, and Colonialism, John Beverley (University of Pittsburgh); Spanish Colonialism in a World Perspective, Julia Suarez Krabbe (Roskilde University); The Tupac Amaru Rebellion, John Beverley (University of Pittsburgh); Map 12: World Colonisation 1945; Alphabetical List of Contributors; Index of Authors (cited); Index of Subjects.
£29.45
Hodder Education Island Voices
Book SynopsisEmbark on a journey through the vibrant tapestry of the Caribbean with this collection of stories from Hodder Education's 'Island Voices: Caribbean Contemporary Short Story Prize.' This volume showcases the winning authors and captures the essence of Caribbean storytelling, reflecting its rich cultural perspectives and diverse voices. These tales transcend entertainment, shedding light on societal nuances and driving change. As one captivated reader remarked, 'The stories in the Caribbean Contemporary Classics Collection transported me, making me feel the heartbeat of the islands.' Dive into these pages and discover the transformative power of storytelling as these prize-winning authors make their mark on the global literary stage.
£16.50
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC The Bloomsbury Handbook to Edwidge Danticat
Book SynopsisEdwidge Danticat's prolific body of work has established her as one of the most important voices in 21st-century literary culture. Across such novels as Breath, Eyes, Memory, Farming the Bones and short story collections such as Krik? Krak! and most recently Everything Inside, essays, and writing for children, the Haitian-American writer has throughout her oeuvre tackled important contemporary themes including racism, imperialism, anti-immigrant politics, and sexual violence. With chapters written by leading and emerging international scholars, this is the most up-to-date and in-depth reference guide to 21st-century scholarship on Edwidge Danticat's work. The Bloomsbury Handbook to Edwidge Danticat covers such topics as: The full range of Danticat's writing from her novels and short stories to essays, life writing and writing for children and young adults. Major interdisciplinary scholarly perspectives including from establishing fields fields of literaTrade ReviewThe Bloomsbury Handbook to Edwidge Danticat is a true first. It is a collection of luminous essays written by first-rate international writers and a welcome addition to the existing scholarship on a prolific Haitian American author known for her skill at handling numerous genres. * English Studies *This edited collection is a comprehensive analysis of Danticat’s writing from multi-themes, multi-genres, and multi-dimensions. Through exploring insightful intertexts and situating her work carefully in context, this collection emphasizes Danticat’s significant contribution to Black literature and represents new directions in the study of her works. * Contemporary Women's Writing *The book highlights various points of entry into Danticat’s impressive oeuvre and would be a fantastic component of a course on the author. It should definitely be owned by every academic library. * H-Net Reviews *Edwidge Danticat continues to be a shining light in contemporary literature, her brilliance radiating through and beyond Haitian, Caribbean, and American writing. This exciting new volume will be an essential guide for scholars, students, and general readers. Chapters range through themes as diverse as death, disaster, food, girlhood, creolization, and memory, and together are as rich and diverse as Danticat's own ever-evolving body of work. * Martin Munro, Eminent Scholar and Winthrop-King Professor of French and Francophone Studies, Florida State University, USA *The Handbook to Edwidge Danticat is an extraordinarily rich and varied exploration of the kaleidoscopic arc of Danticat's writings. Its unrivaled comparative and interdisciplinary scope, with pivotal contributions from a broad range of her most insightful and committed readers, as well as the author herself, marks a definitive and essential contribution to our understanding of Edwidge Danticat's lyrical exploration of Haitian cultural and diasporic experience. * Professor Nick Nesbitt, Princeton University, USA *A timely compilation of essays; a beloved talented writer! This amazing combination enriches our libraries but above all our joy in reading and teaching the work of our lovely Edwidge Danticat. Described by many as a Caribbean griot because of her love for stories and their histories, and her ability to tell and write them, the literary world of this major exponent of Caribbean and Black Women's writing in international contexts is brought into our myriad spaces of political and intellectual consciousness. * Carole Boyce-Davies, Frank H.T. Rhodes Professor of Humane Letters and Professor of Africana Studies and English Africana Studies, Cornell University, USA *Table of ContentsI. LITERARY BEGINNINGS Editors’ Introduction A Literary Life and Legacy: Danticat’s Writerly Inheritances Jana Evans Braziel, Western College Endowed Professor, Miami University, USA Nadège T. Clitandre, University of California, Santa Barbara, USA “All Geography Is Within Me”: Writing Beginnings, Life, Death, Freedom, and Salt Edwidge Danticat Interview with Edwidge Danticat Nadège T. Clitandre, University of California, Santa Barbara, USA II. ON VIOLENCE AND VIOLATED BODIES: BIOPOLITICS IN DANTICAT’S TEXTS Reconstructive Textual Surgery in Danticat’s Krik? Krak! and The Dew-Breaker Judith Misrahi-Barak, University Paul Valéry Montpellier 3, France “I Might Lose All My Life”: Brother, I’m Dying and (Black) Immigration Discourse in the US Myriam J. A. Chancy, Hartley Burr Alexander Chair in the Humanities, Scripps College, USA “Alleys, Capillaries, Thorns”: The Violated Terre-Natale of Ville Rose Jana Evans Braziel, Western College Endowed Professor, Miami University, USA III. ON DEATH AND DYING: NECROPOLITICS IN DANTICAT’S TEXTS Losing Your (M)Other: Danticat’s Narratives of Un/Belonging and Un/Dying Simone A. James Alexander, Seton Hall University, USA Lòt bò dlo: Producing Haitian Spaces of Death and Diaspora in Danticat’s The Dew Breaker Anne Brüske, Heidelberg University, Germany Death and the Maiden: Writing Death in Danticat’s Fiction Marie-José Nzengou-Tayo (PhD), The University of the West Indies, Mona Campus IV. TIFI AK FANM, GIRLS AND WOMEN “Somebody, Anybody Sing a Black Girl’s Song…”: Danticat and Haitian Girlhood Régine Michelle Jean-Charles, Boston College, USA The Good Daughter: Danticat’s Migrating Memories Elizabeth Walcott-Hackshaw, University of the West Indies, Saint Augustine “I Am the One Telling It”: Resilient Children & Shadow Texts in Danticat’s Picture Books Cara Byrne, Case Western University, USA V. ECRI ANGAJE: POLITICAL WRITING: DANTICAT AS PUBLIC INTELLECTUAL Haiti Faces Difficult Questions Ten Years After a Devastating Earthquake Edwidge Danticat Create Dangerously: A Poetics of Writing as Memorial Art; The Text as Echo Chamber Anja Bandau, Leibniz University Hannover, Germany Haiti’s Past, Present, and Uncertain Future: Danticat’s New Yorker Column as Platform for Public Intellectualism Maia Butler, University of North Carolina-Wilmington, USA Megan Feifer, Medaille College VI. FOOD, HAITI, AND HAITIAN CULINARY/LITERARY INHERITANCES Edwidge Danticat's Kitchen History Vale´rie Loichot, Emory University, USA “A People Do Not Throw Their Geniuses Away”: Danticat’s “Kitchen Poet” Literary Antecedents Wilson C. Chen, Benedictine University, USA Scattering and Gathering: Danticat, Food, and (the) Haitian Experience(s) Robyn Cope, Binghamton University, USA VII. THEORETICAL APPROACHES Sea, Stone, Sky, And Cemetery: Vodou’s Divine Nature and Religious Archetypes in Danticat’s Krik? Krak! and After the Dance Kyrah Malika Daniels, Boston College, USA “So Much Had Fallen into The Sea”: An Ecocritical Approach to Danticat’s Claire of the Sea Light Kristina Gibby, Utah Valley University, USA “Aha!”: Danticat and Creolization Carine Mardorossian, State University at Buffalo, USA Memory and The Possibilities of the Short Story Sequence in Krik? Krak! W. Todd Martin, Huntington University, USA VIII. HAITI, THE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC, AND TRANSNATIONAL HISPANIOLA ‘Neither Strangers Nor Friends’: Transnational Hispaniola and the Uneven Intimacies of The Farming of Bones John D. Ribó, Florida State University, USA “Walk too far in either direction and people speak a different language”: Navigating Hispaniola in Edwidge Danticat’s The Farming of Bones and “Nineteen Thirty-Seven” Ramon Ant. Victoriano-Martinez, University of Toronto Mississauga, Canada IX. CRITICAL SOURCES Bibliography of Writings by Edwidge Danticat Bibliography of Literary Criticism on Edwidge Danticat Biographical Notes Index
£39.99
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC J.M. Coetzee and the Archive
Book SynopsisMaking extensive use of the rich archival material contained within the Coetzee collections in Texas and South Africa, from the earliest drafts and notebooks to the research notes and digital records that document his later career as both writer and academic, this volume investigates the historical, cultural and aesthetic contexts of Coetzee''s oeuvre. Cutting-edge and interdisciplinary in approach, the book looks both at the prolific archival traces of Coetzee''s early and middle work as well as examines his more recent work (which has yet to be archived), and a wide range of materials beyond the manuscripts, including family albums, school notebooks and correspondence. Navigating Coetzee's interests in areas as diverse as literature, photography, autobiography, philosophy, animals and embodied life, this is also an exploration of the archive as both theory and practice. It raises questions about the tensions, contradictions and discoveries of archival research, and suggesTrade ReviewJ. M. Coetzee & the Archive is the first edited collection to focus explicitly on Coetzee’s archive. By turns informative, revelatory, thought-provoking, and inspiring, the essays and “conversations” in this volume broach new ways of engaging with Coetzee’s corpus, and contribute to current theoretical debates about “the archival turn” in literary-critical studies. * Carrol Clarkson, Professor of Modern English Literature, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands *Table of ContentsIntroduction: Kai Easton , Marc Farrant & Hermann Wittenberg I. Authorship and Autre-biography 1. Kai Easton (SOAS University of London, UK) – ‘Landmarks: Reading Coetzee’s Maternal Lines’ 2. Shaun Irlam (University of Buffalo, SUNY, USA) – ‘Summertime Sadness: Coetzee, coordinates & negation of the archive’ 3. Valeria Mosca (Independent Scholar) – ‘On the Loss of Fathers and Letters: reading Summertime and The Childhood of Jesus alongside Jacques Derrida’s Archive Fever’ II. History, Politics & the Archive 4. Andrew van der Vlies (Queen Mary University of London, UK) – ‘Writing, Politics, Position: Coetzee and Gordimer in and out of the archive’ 5. Hermann Wittenberg (University of the Western Cape, South Africa)– ‘Out of the Dark Chamber: violence, desire and the late apartheid state in the textual history of Waiting for the Barbarians’ III: Archival Methods: Practice, Data, Process 6. Peter Johnston (Cambridge Assessment, UK) - ‘Humming with fear of sincerity and fabulator’: first observations from the Coetzee corpus and the Coetzee bot 7. Michael Green (Northumbria University, UK) – ‘On Reflection: Coetzee, the archive, and practice research’ IV. On Literary Objects: Form and Style in the Archive 8. David Isaacs (Independent Scholar) – ‘Archival Realism: Elizabeth Costello, Disgrace and the realm of revision’ 9. Paul Stewart (University of Nicosia, Cyrpus) – ‘In Pursuit of Style: Coetzee reading Beckett in the archive’ V. Philosophy and the Archive: Between Life and Truth 10. Marc Farrant (University of Amsterdam, Netherlands) - ‘The Aura of Truth’: Coetzee’s archive, realism, and the question of literary authority’ 11. Richard A. Barney (University of Albany, SUNY, USA) – ‘Coetzee, biopolitics, and the archive of impersonality’ 12. Russell Samolsky (UC Santa Barbara, USA) – ‘Shades of the Archive: J. M. Coetzee, the paradox of poetic sovereignty, and the lives of literary beings’ VI. Conversations with Coetzee 13. Jennifer Rutherford (University of Adelaide, Australia) – ‘Curating Coetzee: from Austin to Adelaide’ 14. Richard Mosse (Artist, Ireland) – ‘Incoming/Waiting for the Barbarians’ 15. Kai Easton (SOAS, UK) – ’34** South’
£29.99
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Community in Contemporary British Fiction
Book SynopsisExamining how British writers are addressing the urgent matter of how we form and express group belonging in the 21st century, this book brings together a range of international scholars to explore the ongoing crises, developments and possibilities inherent in the task of representing community in the present. Including an extended critical introduction that positions the individual chapters in relation to broader conceptual questions, chapters combine close reading and engagement with the latest theories and concepts to engage with the complex regionalities of the United Kingdom, with representation of writers from all parts of the UK including Northern Ireland. Including specific focus on the most challenging issues for community in the past five years, notably Brexit and the Covid-19 crisis, with a broader understanding of themes of local and national belonging, this book offers detailed discussions of writers including Ali Smith, Niall Griffiths, John McGregor, Max Porter, Amanda CTable of ContentsIntroduction Peter Ely and Sara Upstone, Introduction: ‘Rewriting Community in an Age of Crisis and Nostalgia’. Section One: National Community 1. Robert Eaglestone, ‘“The little links are broke”: Ethnocentrism, Englishness and Loneliness in Contemporary Political Science, Political Theory and Contemporary British Fiction’. 2. Alison Garden, ‘“Our uneasy mixed community”: Cross-community Romance, Magic Realism and Northern Ireland’. 3. Timothy Baker, ‘Incomers and Settlers: Nomadism and Entanglement in Contemporary Scottish Fiction’. Section Two: Speculative Community 4. Peter Ely, ‘Beyond the Multicultural: Queer Community in Jackie Kay’s Trumpet’. 5. Caroline Lusin, ‘Neoliberalism and (Sub)Urban Identities in 21st-Century London Novels’. 6. Devon Campbell-Hall, ‘Writing Othered Asian British Skins: Interrogating Racism in Fictional Asian British Communities’. Section Three: Precarious Community 7. Kristian Shaw, ‘Performing the Nation: A Disunited Kingdom in Jonathan Coe’s Middle England’. 8. Emily Horton, ‘“Why would you play a game like that?”: Community and the Pandemic in Kazuo Ishiguro’s Klara and the Sun’. 9. Sara Upstone, ‘Even the Ghosts: Community in the Wake’.
£85.50
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Migration Modernity and Transnationalism in the
Book SynopsisExamining the notion of migration and transnationalism within the life and work of Joseph Conrad, this book situates the multicultural and transnational characters that comprise his fiction while locating Conrad as a subject of the Russian state whose provenance is Polish, but whose identity is that of a merchant sailor and English country gentleman. Conrad's characters are often marked by crossings changes of nation, changes of culture, changes of identity which refract Conrad's own cultural transitions. These crossings not only subjectivise the experience of the migrant through the modern complexities of technology and speed, but also through cross-cultural encounters of food and language. Collectively, these essays explore the experience of the migrant as exile; the inescapable intermeshing of migration, modernity and transnationalism as well as Conrad's own global and multicultural outlook. Conrad's work writes across historical, political and ethnic borders speaking to a transTable of ContentsTABLE OF CONTENTS LIST OF FIGURES ACKOWLEDGEMENTS INTRODUCTION Tania Zulli & Kim Salmons Part One: Crossing Borders CONRAD’S RITES OF ENTRY AND RETURN Robert Hampson BACK IN (THE) UKRAINE: RITES OF PASSAGE AND RITES OF ENTRY William Atkinson FROM BERDYCZÓW TO BISHOPSBOURNE: CONRAD’S REAL AND IMAGINARY JOURNEYS Agnieszka Adamowicz-Pospiech ‘THE VISION OF A COSMOPOLITAN’: THE TRANSNATIONAL AESTHETIC OF A PERSONAL RECORD Riccardo Capoferro Part Two: Empire, Movement and Migration ‘NEW SHADES OF EXPRESSION:’ DEATH AND EMPIRE IN CONRAD’S UNRESTFUL TALES. Richard Niland ‘QUEER FOREIGN FISH’: FOOD AND MIGRATION IN ALMAYER’S FOLLY AND THE SECRET AGENT Kim Salmons “THE EAST SPOKE TO ME, BUT IT WAS IN A WESTERN VOICE”: PERLOCUTIONARY ACTS AND THE LANGUAGE OF MIGRATION IN CONRAD’S FICTION Tania Zulli A ‘SETTLED RESIDENT’: MOVEMENTS OF PEOPLES AND CULTURES IN CONRAD’S MALAY FICTION Andrew Francis Part Three: Modernity and the Transnational ARAB AND MUSLIM TRANSNATIONALISM IN CONRAD’S MALAY FICTION Katherine Baxter ‘AMY FOSTER’, AMERIKA AND AFTER BREAD: MODERNISM, TECHNOLOGY AND THE IMMIGRANT Yael Levin FOUR EXILES IN THREE VOLUMES: W. G. SEBALD, EWA KURYLUK, JUAN GABRIEL VÁSQUEZ AND JOSEPH CONRAD Laurence Davies AFTERWORD: HOW BLACK LIVES MATTER FOR CONRAD’S PERSONAL RECORD OF MIGRATION AND TRANSNATIONALISM Christopher Gogwilt
£28.99
Bloomsbury Publishing (UK) Body Politics in Contemporary Irish Womens Fiction
Book SynopsisEllen Scheible is Professor of English and coordinator of Irish Studies at Bridgewater State University, USA.
£80.75
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC A Jar of Wild Flowers
Book SynopsisYasmin Gunaratnam teaches in sociology at Goldsmiths, University of London. Her latest book is Death and the Migrant: Bodies, Borders, Care (2013).Trade ReviewA lively collection of celebration and gratitude. * Publishers Weekly *An outstanding celebration of the commitment, compassion, and fierceness of John's generosity in his life and work. For decades, John has sought the heart of things and given strength. Come to this beautiful book for solidarity, for vision, and the affirmation that some voices are so true they must be heard. * Anne Michaels, poet and author of Fugitive Pieces *There are a few authors that can change the way you look at the world through their writing and John Berger is one of them. * Jarvis Cocker, musician and author of Mother, Brother, Lover: Selected Lyrics (2012) *The essays in this collection speak to the great range of John Berger's writing that so often reveals a crucial and often unspoken history of our times. * Michael Ondaatje, author of The English Patient *Like John Berger himself: remarkable in every sense. This collection is expansive, intimate, sensuous, poetic, and political. A book that enriches the soul. * Suad Amiry, author of Sharon and My Mother-in-Law *John Berger has made the world a better place to live in. I do not say this lightly. These essays tell us how he succeeded in that task. * Arundhati Roy, author of The God of Small Things *Table of ContentsForeword - Jean Mohr Preface - Amarjit Chandan Introduction - Yasmin Gunaratnam The Colour of the Cosmos Graphite - Hans Jürgen Balmes Hay - Rema Hammami and John Berger Fire - Kathryn Yusoff Milk - Ana Amália Alves Blood - Gavin Francis Forest - Nikos Papastergiadis Toast - Michael Broughton Oil -Tessa McWatt The Trees are in Their Place Fences - Nick Thorpe Method - Iain Chambers Life - Glenn Jordon Meetings - Nirmal Puwar Pain - Francisco-J. Hernández Adrián Secrets - Hsiao-Hung Pai Once through a Lens Memory - Heather Vrana Stars - Vikki Bell Conscience - Ram Rahman Performance - Doa Aly A Mirror - Rashmi Duraiswamy Undefeated Despair Trauma - Alicia Salomone Jest - Salima Hashmi Hate - Mustafa Dikeç Hope - Malathi de Alwis Spirit - Tania Tamari Nasir Propaganda - Rochelle Simmons Here is Where We Meet Notes - Amarjit Chandan Verbs - Ali Smith Play - N. Rajyalakshmi interviews Pushpamala N. Tenderness - Christina Linardaki Love - Julie Christie Courage - Yahia Yakhlef Solidarity - Ambalavaner Sivanandan Tennis - John Christie Afterword - Sally Potter
£15.80
Edinburgh University Press The Subversive Seventies in Tehran
£102.98
Edinburgh University Press Space in Modern Egyptian Fiction
Book SynopsisIn 1960s Egypt a group of writers exploded onto the literary scene, transforming the aesthetic landscape.This bookexplores how this literary generation presents a marked shift in the representation of rural, urban and exilic space, reflecting a disappointment with the project of the postcolonial nation-state in Egypt.
£85.50
Edinburgh University Press Blogging from Egypt
Book SynopsisSix years before the Egyptian revolution of January 2011, many young Egyptians had resorted to blogging as a means of self-expression and literary creativity. Such blogs are explored here as forms of digital literature, combining literary analysis and interviews with the authors.
£26.59
Edinburgh University Press Home and Identity in NineteenthCentury Literary
Book SynopsisThis book brings together a range of new models for modern living that emerged in response to social and economic changes in nineteenth-century London, and the literature that gave expression to their novelty.
£85.50
Edinburgh University Press Islam and Contemporary European Literature
Book SynopsisThis book uses literary texts featuring themes and references related to Islam and the Muslim world to offer new perspectives on non-Western intellectual history and contemporary European literature. Shifting from abstraction to sublimation by highlighting individualized interpretations of religion by authors from both Muslim and non-Muslim backgrounds, it asks how and why present-day European authors, from Albania, France, Germany, Spain and the former Yugoslavia, write fiction or fictionalized works that engage with Islamic religious themes and Europe?s Islamic past. This thematic focus contributes to the interrogation of Eurocentric understandings of literary canons and points out ways of decolonizing the curriculum in the humanities by reading contemporary European literature through the lens of cosmopolitanism, cultural hybridity and in-betweenness.
£90.00
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc Wole Soyinka Literature Activism and African
Book SynopsisThis timely and expansive biography of Wole Soyinka, the Nigerian writer, Nobel laureate, and social activist, shows how the author's early years influence his life's work and how his writing, in turn, informs his political engagement. Three sections spanning his life, major texts, and place in history, connect Soyinka's legacy with global issues beyond the borders of his own country, and indeed beyond the African continent. Covering his encounters with the widespread rise of kleptocratic rule and international corporate corruption, his reflection on the human condition of the North-South divide, and the consequences of postcolonialism, this comprehensive biography locates Wole Soyinka as a global figure whose life and works have made him a subject of conversation in the public sphere, as well as one of Africa's most successful and popular authors. Looking at the different forms of Soyinka's work--plays, novels, and memoirs, among others--this volume argues that Soyinka used writing toTrade ReviewThis book is without any doubt well researched and offer very useful insight into the works and the environments that contributed to making Soyinka what he is today. The duo of Dauda and Falola have through this effort added their own to the body of rich and well-documented works that have come out to interpret Soyinka to his readers and make his work more accessible and understandable ... [T]he duo has contributed in no small way to advancing the frontiers of knowledge and understanding of Soyinka’s complex world. It is a book that should adorn bookshelves of libraries and institutions where serious intellectual work is done. Kudos to Dauda and Falola for this. * Naija Times *Wole Soyinka’s imprimatur on African literature was before his laureateship. This is an Exhibit A of his secular and scared creations whose cessation should come in his wishes, when Obatala, the Yoruba god of creations, calls him home. * Ivor Agyeman-Duah, Associate Director, Wole Soyinka Foundation (2017-2020), University of Johannesburg, South Africa *This book dares to unearth new truths about Wole Soyinka—and more importantly to ask new questions—and by so doing, unmasks the man, his politics, and his art. * E.C. Osondu, Professor of English, Providence College, USA, and Winner of the 2009 Caine Prize for African Writing *This book is yet another worthy addition to scholarship on Wole Soyinka's massive oeuvre, written by profoundly genial, cerebral and authoritative voices on African and global Humanities. It is a must-read for all scholars, intellectuals, and change agents committed to the deployment of cultural and literary superstructure, through the example of the literary patriot Wole Soyinka. * Olufemi Obafemi, Professor of English and Dramatic Literature, University of Ilorin, Nigeria, and President of the Association of Nigerian Authors *Table of ContentsList of Figures Acknowledgments Preface PART 1: INTRODUCTION AND CONTEXT 1. Studies on Wole Soyinka 2. Wole Soyinka in Historical Perspective PART 2: HISTORICAL AND CULTURAL BACKGROUND 3. Abeokuta: The City of Innovations and Creativity 4. Collective Traditions, Childhood, and Rites of Passage 5. Nobel Laureate: Literary Scholarship and Nation-building 6. Relationships, Beliefs, and Values PART 3: LITERARY WORKS 7. Soyinka's Novels 8. Dramatic Oeuvre 9. Soyinka's Poetry 10. The Politics of Soyinka’s Literature PART 4: LEGACIES AND CONCLUSION 11. Soyinka’s Contribution to Literature 12. Soyinka’s Literary Achievements and the Use of Language 13. Conclusion: Will Soyinka’s Works Outlive Him? Bibliography Index
£25.99
Verso Books Makers of Worlds, Readers of Signs: Israeli and
Book SynopsisMakers of Worlds, Readers of Signs charts the aesthetic and political formation of neoliberalism and globalization in Israeli and Palestinian literature from the 1940s to the present. By tracking literature's move from making worlds to reading signs, Cohen Lustig proposes a new way to read theorize our global contemporary. Cohen Lustig argues that the period of Israeli statism and its counterpart of Palestinian statelessness produced works that sought to make and create whole worlds and social time - create the new state of Israel, preserve collective visions of Palestinian statehood. During the period of neoliberalism, the period after 1985 in Israel and the 1993 Oslo Accords in Palestine, literature became about the reading of signs, where politics and history are now rearticulated through the private lives of individual subjects. Here characters do not make social time but live within it and inquire after its missing origin. Cohen Lustig argues for new ways to track the subjectivities and aesthetics produced by larger shifts in production. In so doing, he proposes a new model to understand the historical development of Israeli and Palestinian literature as well as world literature in our contemporary moment. With a preface from Fredric Jameson.Trade ReviewIt is refreshing to read an analysis of Israeli and Palestinian literatures that centers not on identity - national, religious, ethnic, or gender - but rather on the effects of capitalism on politics and culture. -- Danielle Drori * Los Angeles Review of Books *Cohen Lustig has identified a historical trend, and he presents a solid analysis supporting his argument. The historical-theoretical undertaking in this book is both thorough and a joy to read. This work is a worthy and novel contribution to the library of Palestinian historical and literary studies. * Journal of Palestine Studies *
£23.75
Peepal Tree Press Ltd Caribbean Poetics: Toward an Aesthetic of West
Book SynopsisUnique in crossing the cultural divides between the area's Anglophone and non-English speaking communities, Caribbean Poetics features authors from the Dominican Republic, Barbados and Haiti. The anthology has now been expanded to include new criticism of three of the Caribbean's most influential modern artists: Kamau Brathwaite, Pedro Mir and Rene Depestre."Discussions of Caribbean literary aesthetics have tended to focus on the writing of one of the main linguistic blocs of the region… Silvio Torres-Saillant's study is a welcome addition to work that considers commonalities across these blocs."John Thieme, World Literature TodaySilvio Torres-Saillant is the senior editor of the Oxford Encyclopedia of Latinos and Latinas in the United States (2005). He is also the author of An Intellectual History of the Caribbean (Macmillan, 2006). He teaches at Syracuse University, and lives in New York City.
£18.99
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Postcolonial Literatures in Context
Book SynopsisPostcolonial Literatures in Context is a clear, accessible and concise introduction to postcolonial literatures in English (and English translation) and their wider contexts. It begins by introducing key issues involved in the study of postcolonial literature including old and new diasporas, postcolonial nationalisms, indigenous identities and politics and globalization. Close readings of commonly studied texts from and about Africa, Australia, Canada, Palestine and South Asian diasporas highlight critical questions and ways of reading postcolonial texts. A chapter on afterlives and adaptations explores a range of wider cultural texts including film, non-fiction and art. The final section introduces key critical interpretations from different perspectives including diaspora theory, feminism, indigeneity and the postcolony. 'Review, Reading and Research' sections give suggestions for further reading, discussion and research. Introducing texts, contexts and criticism, this is a lively and up-to-date resource for anyone studying postcolonial literatures.Trade Review"Postcolonial Literatures in Context is well researched, intelligent, and lucid in its exploration of the field. It ranges in informed ways across a wide selection of postcolonial texts, both literary and discursive, and its close reading of key examples of fiction published this decade is impressive. A useful and stimulating book." - Shirley Chew, Emeritus Professor of Commonwealth and Postcolonial Literature, University of Leeds, UK... well-presented and clear. -- Routledge ABESTable of ContentsSeries Preface; Part I: Contexts; 1. Social and cultural contexts; 2. Literary contexts; Review, Reading and Research; Part II: Texts; 3. Readings of Key Texts; Review, Reading and Research; Part III: Wider contexts; 4. Critical contexts; 5. Afterlives and adaptations; Review, Reading and Research; Bibliography; Index.
£26.99
Taylor & Francis Ltd Image and Concept: Mythopoetic Roots of
Book SynopsisFirst published in 1997. Image and Concept: Mythopoetic Roots of Literature here - finally - available in English, is devoted to the origins of Greek tragedy. In it, Freidenberg develops the notion that it was the very transition from thinking based on mythological images to the kind of thinking that makes use of formal-logical concepts that resulted in the appearance of literature. With the transition from mythological thinking to conceptual thought, the content of mythological images became the texture of the new concepts. The inherited mythological forms now were reinterpreted conceptually: causalized, ethicized, generalized, abstracted. This reinterpretation, in turn, brought about poetic figurality. Folkloric material began to be differentiated from the mythological images of the past into various disciplines such as religion, philosophy, ethics, literature, and art. Yet, differentiated and reinterpreted as it was, the folkloric material remained formally preserved in poetic image, structure, and plot.Trade Review"Olga Freidenberg, a classic philologist and literary theorist active in Leningrad, has been known in the west mainly for her corroespondence with her cousin Boris Pasternak. That situation is undergoing radical change, as Freidenberg's rich and difficult works are being brought to a wider public by scholars....The present publication is an important addition to the corpus....The rewards are great. Moss does a good job in his introduction of distinguishing Freidenberg's ideas....Given the difficulties of Freidenberg's style, Moss's translation is an impressive accomplishment."Table of ContentsIntroduction; Chapter 1 Explanation of the Theme; Chapter 2 Metaphor; Chapter 3 The Origin of Narrative; Chapter 4 Mime; Chapter 5 Excursus on Philosophy; Chapter 6 Old Comedy; Chapter 7 Tragedy;
£130.00
Bloomsbury India Kannagi Through the Ages: From the Epic to the
Book Synopsis
£80.75
Bloomsbury India Work, Word and the World: Essays on Habitat,
Book Synopsis
£80.75
Bloomsbury India Kazi Nazrul Islam's Journalism: A Critique
Book Synopsis
£80.75
Bloomsbury India Negotiating Culture: Writings from Mizoram
Book Synopsis
£80.75
Bloomsbury India Imagining a Postcolonial Nation: Hindi Novels and
Book Synopsis
£80.75
Bloomsbury India Modernist Transitions: Cultural Encounters
Book Synopsis
£80.75
Bloomsbury India Performing Shakespeare in India
Book SynopsisThis book is envisaged as an intervention in the ongoing explorations in social and cultural history, into questions of what constitutes Indianness for the colonial and the postcolonial subject and the role that Shakespeare plays in this identity formation.Performing Shakespeare in India presents studies of Indian Shakespeare adaptations on stage, on screen, on OTT platforms, in translation, in visual culture and in digital humanities and examines the ways in which these construct Indianness. Shakespeare in India has had multiple local interpretations in different media and equally wide-ranging responses, be it the celebration of Shakespeare as a bishwokobi (world poet) in 19th-century Bengal, be it in the elusive adaptation of Shakespeare in Meitei and Tangkhul tribal art forms in Manipur, or be it in the clamour of a boisterous Bollywood musical. In the response of diasporic theatre professionals, or in Telugu and Kannada translations, whether resisted or
£80.75
Bloomsbury India Polycoloniality: European Transactions with
Book Synopsis
£80.75
Bloomsbury India India in Translation, Translation in India
Book Synopsis
£80.75
Bloomsbury India Remember, Repeat, Inhabit: A Study of Antonin
Book SynopsisRemember, Repeat, Inhabit looks at three questions in relation to the idea of the viewer: What happens when one reads someone else''s reading of someone else?What happens when something repeats itself in Kieslowski''s work?Is there a possibility of an ontology of space?The book attempts to understand the idea of ''viewing'' from the inside, not simply as an ontological premise but definitely affected by it. Three differing contexts are looked at-a French madman''s notion of the ''self'', a Polish filmmaker''s notion of the ''everyday'' and an Indian performance artist''s notion of ''memory''. Through these on-the-surface contrasting artists and texts, a particular idea of a ''viewer'' emerges. This viewer is the key to an understanding of something almost elemental in the nature of the idea of ''viewing'' in the contemporary context of twenty-first-century Delhi.
£80.75
Bloomsbury India Ruskin Bond's Desh: Celebrating Root and Defining
Book Synopsis
£80.75
Bloomsbury India Indian Travel Writing in the Age of Empire:
Book Synopsis
£80.75
Bloomsbury India Horror Fiction in the Global South: Cultures,
Book Synopsis
£999.99