Description

Book Synopsis

Explores literature and film about petroleum as a genre of world literature, focusing on the ubiquity of oil as well as the cultural response to petroleum in postcolonial states.



Trade Review

“This excellent collection not only provides an authoritative introduction to petrofiction’s key texts, conceptual debates, and critical methodologies but also extends the range and scope of that work. In their impressive expansion of the geographical ambit and theoretical concerns of oil fiction, particularly into the Global South, these essays offer new and hitherto underrealized perspectives. They are what the field has been waiting for.”

—Graeme Macdonald,coauthor of Combined and Uneven Development: Toward a New Theory of World-Literature


Oil Fictions covers considerable ground in analyzing oil fiction as well as identifying new sensibilities associated with oil’s fantasy of progress and well-being.”

—Sofia Ahlberg ISLE: Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment



Table of Contents

Preface

Acknowledgements

Introduction: Reading Our Contemporary Petrosphere

Stacey Balkan and Swaralipi Nandi

1. Petrofiction, Revisited

Amitav Ghosh

2. Energy and Autonomy: Worker Struggles and the Evolution of Energy Systems

Ashley Dawson

3. Gendering Petrofiction: Energy, Imperialism, and Social Reproduction

Sharae Deckard

4. Petrofeminism: Love in the Age of Oil

Helen Kapstein

5. “We Are Pipeline People”: Nnedi Okorafor’s Ecocritical Speculations

Wendy W. Walters

6. Petro-drama in the Niger Delta: Ben Binebai’s My Life in the Burning Creeks and Oil’s “Refuse of History”

Henry Obi Ajumeze

7. Documenting “Cheap Nature” in Amitav Ghosh’s The Glass Palace: A Petro-aesthetic Critique

Stacey Balkan

8. Aestheticizing Absurd Extraction: Petro-capitalism in Deepak Unnikrishnan’s “In Mussafah Grew People”

Swaralipi Nandi

9. Petro-cosmopolitics: Oil and the Indian Ocean in Amitav Ghosh’s The Circle of Reason

Micheal Angelo Rumore

10. Xerodrome Lube: Cyclonic Geopoetics and Petropolytical War Machines

Simon Ryle

11. Oil Gets Everywhere: Critical Representations of the Petroleum Industry in Spanish American Literature

Scott DeVries

12. Conjectures on World Energy Literature

Imre Szeman

13. Petrofiction as Stasis in Abdelrahman Munif’s Cities of Salt and Joseph O’Neill’s Netherland

Corbin Hiday

Memoirs and Interviews

14. Assessing the Veracity of the Gulf Dreams: An Interview with Author Benyamin

Maya Vinai

15. Testimonies from the Permian Basin

Kristen Figgins, Rebecca Babcock, and Sheena Stief

Afterword

Contributors

Index

Oil Fictions World Literature and Our

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A Hardback by Stacey Balkan, Swaralipi Nandi

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    View other formats and editions of Oil Fictions World Literature and Our by Stacey Balkan

    Publisher: Pennsylvania State University Press
    Publication Date: 15/10/2021
    ISBN13: 9780271091587, 978-0271091587
    ISBN10: 0271091584

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    Explores literature and film about petroleum as a genre of world literature, focusing on the ubiquity of oil as well as the cultural response to petroleum in postcolonial states.



    Trade Review

    “This excellent collection not only provides an authoritative introduction to petrofiction’s key texts, conceptual debates, and critical methodologies but also extends the range and scope of that work. In their impressive expansion of the geographical ambit and theoretical concerns of oil fiction, particularly into the Global South, these essays offer new and hitherto underrealized perspectives. They are what the field has been waiting for.”

    —Graeme Macdonald,coauthor of Combined and Uneven Development: Toward a New Theory of World-Literature


    Oil Fictions covers considerable ground in analyzing oil fiction as well as identifying new sensibilities associated with oil’s fantasy of progress and well-being.”

    —Sofia Ahlberg ISLE: Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment



    Table of Contents

    Preface

    Acknowledgements

    Introduction: Reading Our Contemporary Petrosphere

    Stacey Balkan and Swaralipi Nandi

    1. Petrofiction, Revisited

    Amitav Ghosh

    2. Energy and Autonomy: Worker Struggles and the Evolution of Energy Systems

    Ashley Dawson

    3. Gendering Petrofiction: Energy, Imperialism, and Social Reproduction

    Sharae Deckard

    4. Petrofeminism: Love in the Age of Oil

    Helen Kapstein

    5. “We Are Pipeline People”: Nnedi Okorafor’s Ecocritical Speculations

    Wendy W. Walters

    6. Petro-drama in the Niger Delta: Ben Binebai’s My Life in the Burning Creeks and Oil’s “Refuse of History”

    Henry Obi Ajumeze

    7. Documenting “Cheap Nature” in Amitav Ghosh’s The Glass Palace: A Petro-aesthetic Critique

    Stacey Balkan

    8. Aestheticizing Absurd Extraction: Petro-capitalism in Deepak Unnikrishnan’s “In Mussafah Grew People”

    Swaralipi Nandi

    9. Petro-cosmopolitics: Oil and the Indian Ocean in Amitav Ghosh’s The Circle of Reason

    Micheal Angelo Rumore

    10. Xerodrome Lube: Cyclonic Geopoetics and Petropolytical War Machines

    Simon Ryle

    11. Oil Gets Everywhere: Critical Representations of the Petroleum Industry in Spanish American Literature

    Scott DeVries

    12. Conjectures on World Energy Literature

    Imre Szeman

    13. Petrofiction as Stasis in Abdelrahman Munif’s Cities of Salt and Joseph O’Neill’s Netherland

    Corbin Hiday

    Memoirs and Interviews

    14. Assessing the Veracity of the Gulf Dreams: An Interview with Author Benyamin

    Maya Vinai

    15. Testimonies from the Permian Basin

    Kristen Figgins, Rebecca Babcock, and Sheena Stief

    Afterword

    Contributors

    Index

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