Description

Book Synopsis
BY THE FINALIST FOR THE 2015 MAN BOOKER INTERNATIONAL PRIZE THE WINNER OF THE 2014 NEUSTADT PRIZE AND THE WINNER OF THE 2013 CAMOES PRIZE "One of the greatest living writers in the Portuguese language."--Philip Graham, The Millions "Subtle and elegant."--The Wall Street Journal "At once deadpan and beguiling."--The Times Literary Supplement "To understand what makes Antonio 'Mia' Emilio Leite Couto special--even extraordinary--we have to loosen our grip on the binary that distinguishes between 'the West' and 'Africa.' Couto is 'white' without not being African, and as an 'African' writer he's one of the most important figures in a global Lusophone literature that stretches across three continents."--The New Inquiry What would Barack Obama's 2004 campaign have looked like if it unfolded in an African nation? What does it mean to be an African writer today? How do writers and poets from all continents teach us to cross the sertao, the savannah, the barren places where we're forced to walk within ourselves? Bringing together the best pieces from his previously untranslated nonfiction collections, alongside new material presented here for the first time in any language, Pensativities offers English readers a taste of Mia Couto as essayist, lecturer, and journalist--with essays on cosmopolitanism, poverty, culture gaps, conservation, and more.

Trade Review
Praise for Pensativities "The essays of Pensativities ... confirm Couto's status as a public intellectual." --The Guardian "Remarkable ... If his recent Neustadt Prize is any indication, [Couto] is a presumptive Nobel Prize-winning writer that we ... should be reading."--National Post "For [Mia Couto], the postcolonial project is not primarily political or economic; it is humanistic in nature, and literary in its means. Its aim is to reconcile history and myth, past and present, subjugator and subject. It brings together black and white, male and female, Africa and the West, young and old, the city and the bush... When reading Couto, it sometimes seems that it is not only the fate of Mozambique or even Africa that is at stake, but that of the whole world."--Ryu Spaeth, Music & Literature "If there is an overarching drive that threads the collection together, it's Couto's commitment to recognize history's numerous flaws, and to use this history to embrace a diverse future, full of 'hybridities' of both self and cultural environs ... A fine writer who deserves a wide North American audience ... [Couto] is a constant witness to a country--flush with nouveau riche and mass poverty--trying to figure out its place in both Africa and the world."--Numero Cinq "[Having] helped birth ... the global literary scene's love affair with African fiction, Couto is a polymath who not only sustains a lively scientific career but is also a former political activist once deeply involved in the fight for his country's independence."--OZY

Table of Contents
The Frontier of Culture Our Poor Rich People A Word of Advice and Some Advice Without Words What Africa Does the African Writer Write About? The Fly or the Spider? Citizenship in Search of Its City The Brazilian Sertão in the Mozambican Savannah Animal Conservation: A Noah-less Ark? Waters of My Beginning Languages We Don't Know We Know The Seven Dirty Shoes Dreaming of Home Travelling Fire Raisers The Planet of Frayed Socks Half a Future Baring One's Voice What if Obama Were African? Nutmegged by a Verse The Waters of Biodiversity As if the Sea Had Another Shore The China Within Us The City on the Veranda of Time Mozambique: 25 Years A Sea of Exchange, an Ocean of Myths The Sweet Containment of Sura Land of Water and Rain Flying Places A Boat in the Sky over Munhava

Pensativities: Selected Essays

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A Paperback / softback by Mia Couto, David Brookshaw

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    View other formats and editions of Pensativities: Selected Essays by Mia Couto

    Publisher: Biblioasis
    Publication Date: 27/08/2015
    ISBN13: 9781771960076, 978-1771960076
    ISBN10: 1771960078

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    BY THE FINALIST FOR THE 2015 MAN BOOKER INTERNATIONAL PRIZE THE WINNER OF THE 2014 NEUSTADT PRIZE AND THE WINNER OF THE 2013 CAMOES PRIZE "One of the greatest living writers in the Portuguese language."--Philip Graham, The Millions "Subtle and elegant."--The Wall Street Journal "At once deadpan and beguiling."--The Times Literary Supplement "To understand what makes Antonio 'Mia' Emilio Leite Couto special--even extraordinary--we have to loosen our grip on the binary that distinguishes between 'the West' and 'Africa.' Couto is 'white' without not being African, and as an 'African' writer he's one of the most important figures in a global Lusophone literature that stretches across three continents."--The New Inquiry What would Barack Obama's 2004 campaign have looked like if it unfolded in an African nation? What does it mean to be an African writer today? How do writers and poets from all continents teach us to cross the sertao, the savannah, the barren places where we're forced to walk within ourselves? Bringing together the best pieces from his previously untranslated nonfiction collections, alongside new material presented here for the first time in any language, Pensativities offers English readers a taste of Mia Couto as essayist, lecturer, and journalist--with essays on cosmopolitanism, poverty, culture gaps, conservation, and more.

    Trade Review
    Praise for Pensativities "The essays of Pensativities ... confirm Couto's status as a public intellectual." --The Guardian "Remarkable ... If his recent Neustadt Prize is any indication, [Couto] is a presumptive Nobel Prize-winning writer that we ... should be reading."--National Post "For [Mia Couto], the postcolonial project is not primarily political or economic; it is humanistic in nature, and literary in its means. Its aim is to reconcile history and myth, past and present, subjugator and subject. It brings together black and white, male and female, Africa and the West, young and old, the city and the bush... When reading Couto, it sometimes seems that it is not only the fate of Mozambique or even Africa that is at stake, but that of the whole world."--Ryu Spaeth, Music & Literature "If there is an overarching drive that threads the collection together, it's Couto's commitment to recognize history's numerous flaws, and to use this history to embrace a diverse future, full of 'hybridities' of both self and cultural environs ... A fine writer who deserves a wide North American audience ... [Couto] is a constant witness to a country--flush with nouveau riche and mass poverty--trying to figure out its place in both Africa and the world."--Numero Cinq "[Having] helped birth ... the global literary scene's love affair with African fiction, Couto is a polymath who not only sustains a lively scientific career but is also a former political activist once deeply involved in the fight for his country's independence."--OZY

    Table of Contents
    The Frontier of Culture Our Poor Rich People A Word of Advice and Some Advice Without Words What Africa Does the African Writer Write About? The Fly or the Spider? Citizenship in Search of Its City The Brazilian Sertão in the Mozambican Savannah Animal Conservation: A Noah-less Ark? Waters of My Beginning Languages We Don't Know We Know The Seven Dirty Shoes Dreaming of Home Travelling Fire Raisers The Planet of Frayed Socks Half a Future Baring One's Voice What if Obama Were African? Nutmegged by a Verse The Waters of Biodiversity As if the Sea Had Another Shore The China Within Us The City on the Veranda of Time Mozambique: 25 Years A Sea of Exchange, an Ocean of Myths The Sweet Containment of Sura Land of Water and Rain Flying Places A Boat in the Sky over Munhava

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