Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review
Prose of the World is an enormously compelling and vivid study. It shows convincingly that the experience of colonial banality was a principal engine of literary modernism. Bringing a transnational perspective to the history of twentieth-century Anglophone fiction, Majumdar provincializes modernism by putting its aesthetic celebration of the ordinary into conversation with the geopolitics of crushing boredom. The result is an ambitious, timely, and eloquent account of the relationship between early-twentieth-century fiction and the contemporary global novel in English. -- Rebecca L. Walkowitz, Rutgers University, author of Cosmopolitan Style: Modernism Beyond the Nation This well-informed, searching study throws new light on the literary consequences of empire. Its insightful account of the experience of boredom and banality on the political and cultural periphery, and of writers' responses to this experience, will be valued by all those interested in the global transformations of modernism and the relation between artistic creativity and colonial hegemony. -- Derek Attridge, University of York There are many impressive things in this book: it provides us with a powerful rethinking of the vexed relationship between empire and modernism, an unprecedented probing of the internal logic of the modernist movement, and a smart meditation on the role of the ordinary and banal in the making of the language of modernism. -- Simon Gikandi, Princeton University Thorough and challenging, this study offers the reader... a new way of thinking about late-colonial modernist fiction's deployment of the banal... [and] offers a powerful if indirect commentary on the considerable failings of postcolonial modernity. Times Literary Supplement Highly recommended. Choice A timely contribution to global modernist and contemporary Anglophone literary studies... Provocative... [Prose of the World] will serve as a reference point for future discussions of modernist and contemporary literature. Contemporary Literature An ambitious and original study that is indispensable reading for any scholars of modernism and postcolonial studies. -- Adam Barrows The Comparatist This book provides a brilliant engagement with the topic from a previously largely ignored angle as it gives centre stage to the motifs of banality and its emotional corollary boredom by appraising a number of thoughtfully chosen texts Anthropological Notebooks A beautiful meditation on the relevance of the uneventful for modernist and postcolonial writing. Novel: A Forum on Fiction Prose of the World reminds us that while the everyday is always banal, it is not always boring. -- Priyasha Mukhopadhyay Interventions Saikat Majumdar's Prose of the World is an erudite, wide-ranging, and innovative study of Anglophone world literature that opens up an array of fundamental theoretical and methodological questions in literary studies. -- Pranav Jani James Joyce Quarterly Works such as these reenergize and alter our engagement with global literature. -- Celiese Lypka ARIEL

Table of Contents
Introduction: Poetics of the Prosaic 1. James Joyce and the Banality of Refusal 2. Katherine Mansfield and the Fragility of Pakeha Boredom 3. The Dailiness of Trauma and Liberation in Zoe Wicomb 4. Amit Chaudhuri and the Materiality of the Mundane Epilogue: The Uneventful Acknowledgments Notes Bibliography Index

Prose of the World

    Product form

    £79.20

    Includes FREE delivery

    RRP £88.00 – you save £8.80 (10%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Fri 3 Jul 2026.

    A Hardback by Saikat Majumdar

    1 in stock

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of Prose of the World by Saikat Majumdar

      Publisher: Columbia University Press
      Publication Date: 08/01/2013
      ISBN13: 9780231156943, 978-0231156943
      ISBN10: 0231156944

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review
      Prose of the World is an enormously compelling and vivid study. It shows convincingly that the experience of colonial banality was a principal engine of literary modernism. Bringing a transnational perspective to the history of twentieth-century Anglophone fiction, Majumdar provincializes modernism by putting its aesthetic celebration of the ordinary into conversation with the geopolitics of crushing boredom. The result is an ambitious, timely, and eloquent account of the relationship between early-twentieth-century fiction and the contemporary global novel in English. -- Rebecca L. Walkowitz, Rutgers University, author of Cosmopolitan Style: Modernism Beyond the Nation This well-informed, searching study throws new light on the literary consequences of empire. Its insightful account of the experience of boredom and banality on the political and cultural periphery, and of writers' responses to this experience, will be valued by all those interested in the global transformations of modernism and the relation between artistic creativity and colonial hegemony. -- Derek Attridge, University of York There are many impressive things in this book: it provides us with a powerful rethinking of the vexed relationship between empire and modernism, an unprecedented probing of the internal logic of the modernist movement, and a smart meditation on the role of the ordinary and banal in the making of the language of modernism. -- Simon Gikandi, Princeton University Thorough and challenging, this study offers the reader... a new way of thinking about late-colonial modernist fiction's deployment of the banal... [and] offers a powerful if indirect commentary on the considerable failings of postcolonial modernity. Times Literary Supplement Highly recommended. Choice A timely contribution to global modernist and contemporary Anglophone literary studies... Provocative... [Prose of the World] will serve as a reference point for future discussions of modernist and contemporary literature. Contemporary Literature An ambitious and original study that is indispensable reading for any scholars of modernism and postcolonial studies. -- Adam Barrows The Comparatist This book provides a brilliant engagement with the topic from a previously largely ignored angle as it gives centre stage to the motifs of banality and its emotional corollary boredom by appraising a number of thoughtfully chosen texts Anthropological Notebooks A beautiful meditation on the relevance of the uneventful for modernist and postcolonial writing. Novel: A Forum on Fiction Prose of the World reminds us that while the everyday is always banal, it is not always boring. -- Priyasha Mukhopadhyay Interventions Saikat Majumdar's Prose of the World is an erudite, wide-ranging, and innovative study of Anglophone world literature that opens up an array of fundamental theoretical and methodological questions in literary studies. -- Pranav Jani James Joyce Quarterly Works such as these reenergize and alter our engagement with global literature. -- Celiese Lypka ARIEL

      Table of Contents
      Introduction: Poetics of the Prosaic 1. James Joyce and the Banality of Refusal 2. Katherine Mansfield and the Fragility of Pakeha Boredom 3. The Dailiness of Trauma and Liberation in Zoe Wicomb 4. Amit Chaudhuri and the Materiality of the Mundane Epilogue: The Uneventful Acknowledgments Notes Bibliography Index

      Recently viewed products

      © 2026 Book Curl

        • American Express
        • Apple Pay
        • Diners Club
        • Discover
        • Google Pay
        • Maestro
        • Mastercard
        • PayPal
        • Shop Pay
        • Union Pay
        • Visa

        Login

        Forgot your password?

        Don't have an account yet?
        Create account