List of Figures
Acknowledgments
Theory as World Literature: An Introduction
Jeffrey R. Di Leo, University of Houston-Victoria, USA
Part
1. Indigeneity, Decoloniality, and Race
1. Destructive Writing and Ending the World
Claire Colebrook, Penn State University, USA
2. Archipelagic Thought as World Literature: Glissant, Wynter, and Derrida's Genres of the World
Mina Karavanta, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece
3. Countering Encounters: Theorizing the Scale of Globality
Peter Hitchcock, CUNY Graduate Center, USA
4. Critical Race Theory: Counter-storytelling as Worlding
Nicole Simek, Whitman College, USA
Part
2. Semiotics and Psychoanalysis
5. Umberto Eco and the World Literature of Semiotics
Jeffrey R. Di Leo, University of Houston-Victoria, USA
6. Kristeva's Semanalyse as World Literature: From Chora and Revolution to Abjection and Revolt
Paul Allen Miller, University of South Carolina, USA
7. Psychoanalysis as World Literature
Zahi Zalloua, Whitman College, USA
Part III. Realisms, Aesthetics, and Politics
8. From the Magically Real to the Really Real: When Latin American Literature Became World Theory
Sophia McClennen, Penn State University, USA
9. Approaches to Realism: A Few Global Test Cases
Margaret R. Higonnet, University of Connecticut, USA
10. Literature as a Global Theory
Alex Taek-Gwang Lee, Kyung Hee University, South Korea
11. Said's Worldliness
H. Aram Veeser, CUNY Graduate Center, USA
Part IV. Phenomenology, Philology, and Plasticity
12. Levinas and World Literature
Donald R. Wehrs, Auburn University, USA
13. World Philology and World Theory
Alexander Beecroft, University of South Carolina, USA
14. Plastic, World, Literature
Ranjan Ghosh, University of North Benjal, India
Bibliography
Notes on Contributors
Index