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Postcolonial Poetics: Genre and Form [Kietas viršelis]

Edited by (School of Languages, Literatures & Cultures, University College, Cork (Ireland)), Edited by (Exeter College, University of Oxford (United Kingdom))
  • Formatas: Hardback, 279 pages, aukštis x plotis: 239x163 mm
  • Serija: Francophone Postcolonial Studies 2
  • Išleidimo metai: 16-Nov-2011
  • Leidėjas: Liverpool University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1846317452
  • ISBN-13: 9781846317453
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 279 pages, aukštis x plotis: 239x163 mm
  • Serija: Francophone Postcolonial Studies 2
  • Išleidimo metai: 16-Nov-2011
  • Leidėjas: Liverpool University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1846317452
  • ISBN-13: 9781846317453
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Postcolonial literature has often tended to invite readings that focus on the relation between texts and political contexts, not surprisingly perhaps, given the fraught historical moments of colonialism and decolonisation with which it frequently engages. Nevertheless, critics such as Nicholas Harrison have argued for attention to the literary as literary, and have explored the ways in which literary representation makes any assumed ideological content necessarily indeterminate. Taking into account this call for attention to the literary, this volume investigates more specifically the idiosyncrasies of postcolonial poetics, including postcolonial literatures use of and experimentation with genre and form. However, this attention to poetics is not intended to replace political engagement, and, rather than privileging the literary at the expense of the political, this volume analyses how texts use genre and form to offer multiple distinct ways of responding to political and historical questions. Postcolonial texts engage with the political world in a variety of ways, directly or indirectly, and it is in their specific uses of genre and form that they alter or develop our understanding of the particular contexts with which they grapple. According to Graham Huggan, postcolonial studies is inherently plural and interdisciplinary, in that it is made up of literary and cultural analysis as well as political theory, psychoanalysis, anthropology, history and philosophy. It is in the combination and manipulation of such forms of analysis that postcolonialism is able to imagine alternative identities and societies. This volume of postcolonial poetics therefore probes some examples of different kinds of literary writing, its blurring with other discourses and its manipulation of genre and form, in order to achieve a better understanding of its transformatory power.This exploration of the poetics of genre also sheds light on how different kinds of texts offer specific, distinct modes of thought.

Recenzijos

... this book will provide a key reference point for researchers embarking on analyses of postcolonial cultural production.

Gillian Jein, French Studies, vol 67, no 1

Preface vii
Dominique Combe
Acknowledgements xiii
Introduction 1(12)
Jane Hiddleston
Literary Form and the Politics of Interpretation
`New World' Exiles and Ironists from Evariste Parny to Ananda Devi
13(22)
Francoise Lionnet
`...without losing sight of the whole': Said and Goethe
35(14)
Matthias Zach
Metaphorical Memories: Freud, Conrad and the Dark Continent
49(22)
Nicholas Harrison
Playing the Field/Performing `the Personal' in Maryse Conde's Interviews
71(20)
Eva Sansavior
Writing Subjectivity, Crossing Borders
A Concern Peculiar to Western Man? Postcolonial Reconsiderations of Autobiography as Genre
91(18)
Bart Moore-Gilbert
Still Beseiged by Voices: Djebar's Poetics of the Threshold
109(20)
Clarisse Zimra
Algerian Letters: Mixture, Genres, Literature Itself
129(18)
Patrick Crowley
How to Speak about It? Kateb Yacine's Feminine Voice or Literature's Wager: A Reading of Nedjma
147(19)
Mireille Calle-Gruber
Jane Hiddleston
The Rise of the recit d'enfance in the Francophone Caribbean
166(19)
Louise Hardwick
Reinventing the Legacies of Genre
The Tragedy of Decolonization: Dialectics at a Standstill
185(17)
Martin Megevand
J. M. Coetzee's Australian Realism
202(17)
Elleke Boehmer
Ambivalence and Ambiguity of the Short Story in Albert Camus's `L'Hote' and Mohammed Dib's `La Fin'
219(21)
Andy Stafford
Writing against Genocide: Genres of Opposition in Narratives from and about Rwanda
240(22)
Zoe Norridge
Notes on Contributors 262(4)
Index 266
Patrick Crowley is Senior Lecturer in French at University College Cork. Jane Hiddleston is Professor of Literatures in French at the University of Oxford.