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  1. Gaelic Scotland in the colonial imagination
    Anglophone writing from 1600 to 1900
    Author: Stroh, Silke
    Published: 2017
    Publisher:  Northwestern University Press, Evanston, Illinois

    The modern nation-state and its others: civilizing missions at home and abroad, ca. 1600 to 1800 -- Anglophone literature of civilization and the hybridized Gaelic subject: Martin Martin's travel writings -- The reemergence of the primitive other?... more

     

    The modern nation-state and its others: civilizing missions at home and abroad, ca. 1600 to 1800 -- Anglophone literature of civilization and the hybridized Gaelic subject: Martin Martin's travel writings -- The reemergence of the primitive other? Noble savagery and the romantic age -- From flirtations with romantic otherness to a more integrated national synthesis: "Gentleman savages" in Walter Scott's novel Waverley -- Of Celts and Teutons: racial biology and anti-Gaelic discourse, ca. 1780-1860 -- Racist reversals: Appropriating racial typology in late-nineteenth-century pro-Gaelic discourse

     

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    Volltext (kostenfrei)
    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9780810134041
    RVK Categories: HG 430
    DDC Categories: LIT 004120
    Subjects: Scottish literature -- 18th century -- History and criticism; Scottish literature -- 19th century -- History and criticism; Celts in literature; Postcolonialism in literature; Literaturwissenschaft; Englisch; Kelten; Postkoloniale Literatur; Literatur
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (viii, 331 Seiten), Illustrationen, Diagramme
  2. Postcolonial agency in African and diasporic literature and film
    a study in globalectics
    Published: 2022
    Publisher:  Routledge, New York ; Taylor & Francis Group, London

    "This book chronicles the rise and the development of postcolonial agency since Africa's encounter with Western modernity through African and African diaspora literature and film. Using African and African diasporic imaginaries (creative writings,... more

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    "This book chronicles the rise and the development of postcolonial agency since Africa's encounter with Western modernity through African and African diaspora literature and film. Using African and African diasporic imaginaries (creative writings, autobiographies, polemical writings, and filmic media) the author shows how African subjects have resisted enslavement and colonial domination over the past centuries, and how they have sought to reshape "global modernity". Authors and film makers whose works are examined in detail include Olaudah Equiano, William Sheppard, Haile Gerima, Wole Soyinka, Dani Kouyaté, Chris Abani, Chimamanda Adichie, Leila Aboulela, Imbolo Mbue, Alain Mabanckou, Abdourahman Waberi, Marie NDiaye, and Fatou Diome. Providing a critical study of nativism, hybridity and post-hybrid conjunctive consciousness, this book will be of interest to students and scholars of African and African diasporic literature, history, and cultural studies"--...

     

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  3. The postcolonial Indian city
    literature, policy, politics and evolution
    Published: 2022
    Publisher:  Routledge, New York, NY ; Taylor & Francis Group, London

    "How is the city represented through literature from the post-colonies? This book looks for an answer to this question, by keeping its focus on India -from after Independence to the millennia"--... more

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    "How is the city represented through literature from the post-colonies? This book looks for an answer to this question, by keeping its focus on India -from after Independence to the millennia"--...

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781000563252; 1000563251; 9781003166337; 1003166334; 9781000563276; 1000563278
    Other identifier:
    Series: Routledge research in postcolonial literatures
    Subjects: Cities and towns in literature; Indic literature; Public spaces in literature; Postcolonialism in literature; Indic literature; LITERARY CRITICISM / Asian / Indic
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource
  4. London as a literary region
    the portrayal of the metropolis in contemporary postcolonial British fiction
    Published: [2007]; © 2007
    Publisher:  Wißner, Augsburg

    Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin - Preußischer Kulturbesitz, Haus Unter den Linden
    Unlimited inter-library loan, copies and loan
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    Source: Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin
    Language: English
    Media type: Dissertation
    Format: Print
    ISBN: 3896395793; 9783896395795
    RVK Categories: HN 1331
    Series: Studies in anglophone literatures and cultures ; Vol. 1
    Subjects: English literature; Postcolonialism in literature
    Scope: 215 Seiten, 24 cm
    Notes:

    Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 207-215

    Dissertation, Universität Marburg, 2005

  5. Afro-Uruguayan literature
    postcolonial perspectives
    Published: 2003
    Publisher:  Bucknell Univ. Press, Lewisburg

    Ibero-Amerikanisches Institut Preußischer Kulturbesitz, Bibliothek
    Unlimited inter-library loan, copies and loan
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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Book
    Format: Print
    ISBN: 083875550X
    RVK Categories: IQ 83127
    Subjects: Blacks; Postcolonialism in literature; Uruguayan literature; Uruguayan literature; Uruguayan literature
    Scope: 170 S
  6. Re-storying Mediterranean worlds
    new narratives from Italian cultures to global citizenship
    Published: [2022]
    Publisher:  Bloomsbury Academic, New York

    "An investigation of Mediterranean worlds (history, literature, geography, arts) between past, present and future, in relation to the interaction among archaic cultures, sustainability and ongoing globalization"-- more

     

    "An investigation of Mediterranean worlds (history, literature, geography, arts) between past, present and future, in relation to the interaction among archaic cultures, sustainability and ongoing globalization"--

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Contributor: Biancofiore, Angela (Publisher); Barniaudy, Clément (Publisher); Duverne, Joel; Fiorini, Raffaella; Gambioli, Valentina; Facon, Thémis; Snaith, Kirsty
    Language: English
    Media type: Book
    Format: Print
    ISBN: 9781501378935
    Subjects: Literature and globalization; Postcolonialism in literature; Postmodernism (Literature)
    Scope: xv, 210 Seiten, Illustrationen
    Notes:

    Enthält Literaturangaben

    Introduction: Thinking interconnected worlds / Angela Biancofiore, Clément Barniaudy -- Mediterranean worlds : towards an ecology of creation / Angela Biancofiore -- An impossible abode : the world and modernity / Myriam Carminati -- Literary Sardness : between colonial and post-colonial, creoleness and creolization / Margherita Marras -- From house to archipelago : ways of inhabiting Mediterranean worlds / Clément Barniaudy -- Pasolini and the Mediterranean : lost cultural worlds and the reappearance of archaic worlds / Matthias Quemener -- The Mediterranean panorama through migrant writers / Vittorio Valentino -- The other Mediterranean : Italian migration poetry / Flaviano Pisanelli -- Naples and Europe, past and future : The "Sud" review - a link between the Mediterranean and Europe / Cathryn Baril -- The Mediterranean town in question / Raffaele Cattedra -- Testimony : where is Tunisia going? / Fethi Nagga -- Trilingualism in Tunisia : a disturbing topic / Alfonso Campisi -- The Charter of Palermo : the future of a utopia / Jean Duflot -- Annex: The Charter of Palermo

  7. Literature for our times
    postcolonial studies in the twenty-first century
    Published: 2012
    Publisher:  Rodopi, Amsterdam

    Preliminary Material -- The Commonwealth Legacy: Towards a Decentred Reading of World Literature /Frank Schulze–Engler -- Global Literary Refractions: Reading Pascale Casanova’s The World Republic of Letters in the Post-Cold War Era /Debjani Ganguly... more

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    Preliminary Material -- The Commonwealth Legacy: Towards a Decentred Reading of World Literature /Frank Schulze–Engler -- Global Literary Refractions: Reading Pascale Casanova’s The World Republic of Letters in the Post-Cold War Era /Debjani Ganguly -- Not (Yet) Speaking to Each Other: The Politics of Speech in Jamaica Kincaid’s Postcolonialism /Lincoln Z. Shlensky -- Frailty and Feeling: Literature for Our Times /Paul Sharrad -- Spaces of Desire: A Pleasant Séjour in Robert Kroetsch’s The Hornbooks of Rita K /Nela Bureu Ramos -- From Indomania to Indophobia: Thomas De Quincey’s Providential Orientalism /Daniel Sanjiv Roberts -- Rebels of Empire: The Human Idiom in Ruskin Bond’s A Flight of Pigeons /Satish C. Aikant -- A Multi-Centred Globe: Translation as the Language of Languages /Ngũgĩ Wa Thiong’o -- Ngũgĩ’s Wizard of the Crow and the Edifice Complex /John C. Hawley -- Re-membering the Dismembered: Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o, Language, Resistance, and Identity-Formation /Mumia G. Osaaji -- Scars of Language in Translation: The ‘Itchy’ Poetics of Jam Ismail /Elena Basile -- English in the Languages of Cultural Encounters /Robert J.C. Young -- The Missing Link: Transculturation, Hybridity, and/or Transculturality? /Sissy Helff -- Drickie Potter and the Annihilating Sea: Reading Jamaica Kincaid’s Waves of Nothingness /John Clement Ball -- Bhangra Boomerangs: Re-Imagining Apna Punjab /Anjali Gera Roy -- “Trading Places in the Promised Lands”: Indian Pilgrimage Paradigms in Postcolonial Travel Narratives /Dorothy Lane -- Writing as Healing: Fijiindians – The Twice Banished? /Kavita Ivy Nandan -- To Veil or Not to Veil: Muslim Women Writers Speak Their Rights /Feroza Jussawalla -- Gendered Bodies in Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s Purple Hibiscus /Cheryl Stobie -- Bearing Witness: Gender, Apocalypse, and History /Marilyn Adler Papayanis -- Literature of the Land: An Ethos for These Times /Jeannette Armstrong -- Masculindians: The Violence and Voyeurism of Male Sibling Relationships in Recent First-Nations Fiction /Sam Mckegney -- From Noble Savage to Brave New Warrior?: Constructions of a Māori Tradition of Warfare /Michaela Moura–Koçoğlu -- A Native Clearing Revisited: Positioning Philippine Literature /Chelva Kanaganayakam -- Asia’s Christian-Latin Nation?: Postcolonial Reconfigurations in the Literature of the Philippines /Stephen Ney -- A Dalit Among Dalits: The Angst of Tamil Dalit Women /K.A. Geetha -- Tamil Dalit Literature: Some Riddles /P. Sivakami -- Categories of Caste, Class, and Telugu Dalit Literature /K. Satyanarayana -- Plotting Hogwarts: Situating the School Ideologically and Culturally /Vandana Saxena and Angelie Multani -- Streets and Transformation in Zadie Smith’s White Teeth and “Stuart” /Pamela Mccallum -- Bharati Mukherjee’s “The Management of Grief” and the Politics of Mourning in the Aftermath of the Air India Bombing /Fred Ribkoff -- Affect and the Ethics of Reading ‘Post-Conflict’ Memoirs: Revisiting Antjie Krog’s Country of My Skull and Philip Gourevitch’s We Wish to Inform You that Tomorrow We Will Be Killed with Our Families /Susan Spearey. Literature for Our Times offers the widest range of essays on present and future directions in postcolonial studies ever gathered together in one volume. Demonstrating the capacity of different approaches and methodologies to ‘live together’ in a spirit of ‘convivial democracy’, these essays range widely across regions, genres, and themes to suggest the many different directions in which the field is moving. Beginning with an engagement with global concerns such as world literatures and cosmopolitanism, translation, diaspora and migrancy, established and emerging critics demonstrate the ways in which postcolonial analysis continues to offer valuable ways of analysing the pressing issues of a globalizing world. The field of Dalit studies is added to funda¬mental interests in gender, race, and indigeneity, while the neglected site of the post¬colonial city, the rising visibility of terrorism, and the continuing importance of trauma and loss are all addressed through an analysis of particular texts. In all of these ap¬proaches, the versatility and adaptability of postcolonial theory is seen at its most energetic. Contributors: Satish Aikant, Jeannette Armstrong, John Clement Ball, Elena Basile, Nela Bureu Ramos, Debjani Ganguly, K.A. Geetha, Henry A. Giroux, John C. Hawley, Sissy Helff, Feroza Jussawalla, Chelva Kanaganayakam, Dorothy Lane, Pamela McCallum, Sam McKegney, Michaela Moura–Koçoğlu, Angelie Multani, Kavita Ivy Nandan, Stephen Ney, Ngugi wa Thiong’o, Mumia G. Osaaji, Marilyn Adler Papayanis, Summer Pervez, Fred Ribkoff, Daniel Sanjiv Roberts, Anjali Gera Roy, Frank Schulze–Engler, Paul Sharrad, Lincoln Z. Shlensky, K. Satyanarayana, Vandana Saxena, P. Sivakami, Pilar Somacarrera, Susan Spearey, Cheryl Stobie, Robert J.C. Young

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9789401207393
    Other identifier:
    Series: Array ; 145
    Subjects: Postcolonialism in literature; Literature, Modern; Literature, Modern; Postcolonialism in literature; Criticism, interpretation, etc
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (xxxv, 665 pages)
    Notes:

    Includes bibliographical references and index

  8. On representation
    Deleuze and Coetzee on the colonized subject
    Published: 2011
    Publisher:  Rodopi, Amsterdam

    Preliminary Material -- The Body of Dusklands -- The Space of Waiting for the Barbarians -- The Language of Foe -- The Other Question -- Works Cited -- Index. In this important new study, Hamilton establishes and develops innovative links between the... more

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    Preliminary Material -- The Body of Dusklands -- The Space of Waiting for the Barbarians -- The Language of Foe -- The Other Question -- Works Cited -- Index. In this important new study, Hamilton establishes and develops innovative links between the sites of postcolonial literary theory, the fiction of the South African/Australian academic and Nobel Prize-winning writer J.M. Coetzee, and the work of the French poststructuralist philosopher Gilles Deleuze. Centering on the key postcolonial problematic of representation, Hamilton argues that if one approaches the colonial subject through Gilles Deleuze’s rewriting of subjectivity, then a transcendent configuration of the colonial subject is revealed. Importantly, it is this rendition of the colonial subject that accounts best for the way in which the colonial subject is able to propose and offer instances of resistance to colonial structures of subjectification. In elucidating this claim, the study turns to the fiction of Coetzee. Offering unique Deleuzean readings of three of Coetzee’s most theoretically beguiling novels – Dusklands , Waiting for the Barbarians , and Foe – On Representation will prove to be essential reading to those interested in Coetzee studies, the literary terrain of Deleuze’s philosophy, and those engaging with contemporary debates in postcolonial literature and theory

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9789401206990
    Other identifier:
    Series: Cross/cultures ; 142
    Subjects: Postcolonialism in literature; Postcolonialism in literature
    Other subjects: Deleuze, Gilles (1925-1995); Coetzee, J. M; Deleuze, Gilles
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (xxxiv, 188 pages)
    Notes:

    Includes bibliographical references (p. 171-178) and index

  9. Common places
    the poetics of African Atlantic postromantics
    Published: 2011
    Publisher:  Rodopi, Amsterdam

    Preliminary Material -- OUT OF THE ABYSS: COMMONPLACES OF REPETITION AND REDEMPTION -- GLISSANT’S COMMON PLACES -- WALCOTT’S ALLEGORY OF HISTORY -- A BACKWARD FAITH IN WALCOTT’S “THE SCHOONER FLIGHT” -- CLAUDIA RANKINE: JANE EYRE’S BLUES AT THE END... more

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    Preliminary Material -- OUT OF THE ABYSS: COMMONPLACES OF REPETITION AND REDEMPTION -- GLISSANT’S COMMON PLACES -- WALCOTT’S ALLEGORY OF HISTORY -- A BACKWARD FAITH IN WALCOTT’S “THE SCHOONER FLIGHT” -- CLAUDIA RANKINE: JANE EYRE’S BLUES AT THE END OF THE ALPHABET -- DEAR DIARY: AMANIFESTO – WEREWERE LIKING’S ELLE SERA DE JASPE ET DE CORAIL -- RITUALIZING UTOPIA IN ELLE SERA DE JASPE ET DE CORAIL -- MASKS OF AFFLICTION IN FRANKÉTIENNE’S HAITI -- FRANKÉTIENNE’S LOGORRHEA: AN EXCESS OF SEEMING -- “THE HORIZON DEVOURS MY VOICE”: NOTES ON TRANSLATION -- BIBLIOGRAPHY -- INDEX. While a great deal of postcolonial criticism has examined how the processes of hybridity, mestizaje, creolization, and syncretism impact African diasporic literature, Oakley employs the heuristic of the “commonplace” to recast our sense of the politics of such literature. Her analysis of commonplace poetics reveals that postcolonial poetic and political moods and aspirations are far more complex than has been admitted. African Atlantic writers summon the utopian potential of Romanticism, which had been stricken by Anglo-European exclusiveness and racial entitlement, and project it as an attainable, differentially common future. Putting poets Frankétienne (Haiti), Werewere Liking (Côte d’Ivoire), Derek Walcott (St Lucia), and Claudia Rankine (Jamaica) in dialogue with Romantic poets and theorists, as well as with the more recent thinkers Édouard Glissant, Walter Benjamin, and Emmanuel Levinas, Oakley shows how African Atlantic poets formally revive Romantic forms, ranging from the social utopian manifesto to the poète maudit , in their pursuit of a redemptive allegory of African Atlantic experiences. Common Places addresses issues in African and Caribbean literary studies, Romanticism, poetics, rhetorical theory, comparative literature, and translation theory, and further, models a postcolonial critique in the aesthetic-ethical and “new aestheticist” vein

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English; French
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9789401206952
    Other identifier:
    Series: Textxet: studies in comparative literature ; 63
    Subjects: Literature; Poetry; Caribbean poetry; Cultural pluralism; African diaspora in literature; Postcolonialism in literature; Miscegenation in literature
    Other subjects: Glissant, Édouard (1928-2011); Walcott, Derek; Frankétienne; Rankine, Claudia (1963-)
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (317 pages)
    Notes:

    Includes bibliographical references (p. 289-306) and index

  10. Chewing over the West
    occidental narratives in non-Western readings
    Published: 2009
    Publisher:  Rodopi, Amsterdam

    Preliminary Material -- Theme and Identity in Postcolonial Arabic Writing /Rasheed El-Enany -- Moving Pictures: Western Marxism and Vernacular Literature in Colonial Indonesia /Keith Foulcher -- Mother Tongues with a Western Accent: Indigenous... more

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    Preliminary Material -- Theme and Identity in Postcolonial Arabic Writing /Rasheed El-Enany -- Moving Pictures: Western Marxism and Vernacular Literature in Colonial Indonesia /Keith Foulcher -- Mother Tongues with a Western Accent: Indigenous Negotiations with English Language and Narratives in Kenyan Art /Evan Mwangi -- The Development of Modern Burmese Theatre and Literature Under Western Influence /U WIN PE -- Writing Against, Writing With: The Case of Algerian Literature /Amina Azza–Bekkat -- The Use of T.S. Eliot’s Literary Traditions in Contemporary Arabic Poetry /Saddik M. Gohar -- War and Ideology: Erich Maria Remarque’s All Quiet on the Western Front and the Vietnamese Novel Without a Name by Duong Thu Huong /Ursula Lies -- Under Indian Eyes: Characterization and Dialogism in Modern Hindi Fiction /Thomas de Bruijn -- In Search of a New Image: An Indian Madame Bovary? /Guzel V. Strelkova -- Chewing Over Ethnographic Models: Berber Writings from Algeria /Daniela Merolla -- The naya drama in India: Rediscovering the Self in the Western Mirror /Anna Suvorova -- Hybridity in Komedi Stambul /Matthew Isaac Cohen -- “Elementary, My Dear Wat”: Influence and Imitation in the Early Crime Fiction of ‘Late-Victorian’ Siam /Rachel Harrison -- The Vanishing-Act of Sherlock Holmes in Indonesia’s National Awakening /Doris Jedamski -- Notes on Contributors -- Index. The orientation of academic institutions has in recent years been moving away from highly specialized area studies in the classical sense towards broader regional and comparative studies. Cultural studies points to the limitation of Western approaches to non-Western cultures – a development not yet reflected in actual research and data collections. Bringing together scholars from all over the world with specialized knowledge in both Western and non-Western languages, literatures, and cultures, this collection of essays provides new insights into the agency of non-Western literatures in relation to the West – a term used with critical caution and, like other common binary dualisms, challenged here. Inter-cultural expertise, seldom applied in the combination of Asian, African, and ‘oriental’ perspectives, makes this compilation of essays an important contribution to the study of colonialism and postcoloniality. Topics covered include postcolonial Arabic writing; T.S. Eliot in contemporary Arabic poetry; Algerian (and Berber) literature; the English language and narratives in Kenyan art; characterization, dialogism, gender and Western infuence in modern Hindi fiction; Naya drama in India; modern Burmese theatre and literature under Western influence; Remarque’s All Quiet on the Western Front and the Vietnamese Novel Without a Name ; Western Marxism and vernacular literature in colonial Indonesia; hybridity in Komedi Stambul ; and Sherlock Holmes in/and the crime fiction of Siam and Indonesia Contributors: Amina Azza Bekkat; Thomas de Bruijn; Matthew Isaac Cohen; Rasheed El-Enany; Keith Foulcher; Saddik M. Gohar; Rachel Harrison; Doris Jedamski; Ursula Lies; Daniela Merolla; Evan Mwangi; Guzel Vladimirovna Strelkova; Anna Suvorova; U Win Pe

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9789042027848
    Other identifier:
    Series: Cross-cultures: readings in the post/colonial literatures in English ; 119
    Subjects: Postcolonialism in literature; Colonies in literature; Postcolonialism in literature; Criticism, interpretation, etc; Literatures
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (xxxi, 406 pages)
    Notes:

    Includes bibliographical references and index

  11. Shared waters
    soundings in postcolonial literatures
    Published: 2009
    Publisher:  Rodopi, Amsterdam

    Preliminary Material -- Exchanging – Sharing Our Places /Hoda Barakat -- Exclusion and the Intellectuals — Some Thoughts on Unequal Academic Exchange Between Africa and the West /Brian Crow -- What Lies Ahead: Consolidation and Diversity in... more

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    Preliminary Material -- Exchanging – Sharing Our Places /Hoda Barakat -- Exclusion and the Intellectuals — Some Thoughts on Unequal Academic Exchange Between Africa and the West /Brian Crow -- What Lies Ahead: Consolidation and Diversity in Postcolonial Studies /Jesús Varela Zapata -- Beyond Revolution: Re-Writing Violence and the Future of Postcolonial Studies /Daphne Grace -- Territorial Terrors: Colonial Spaces and Postcolonial Revisions – Some Basic Concepts /Gerhard Stilz -- In the Enemy’s Camp: Women Representing Male Violence in Zimbabwe’s Wars /Pauline Dodgson–Katiyo -- Shared Place and Maimed Bodies: Flesh of the Past, Soul of the Future (or Vice-Versa) in Once Were Warriors /Chantal Kwast–Greff -- Historical Trauma, lieu de mémoire, Source of Collective Renewal: Parihaka in the Poetic Imagination of Aotearoa New Zealand /Bärbel Czennia -- Becoming a Writer in Morocco /Leila Abouzeid -- Middle Eastern Women’s Roles Transformed: The Gendered Spaces of Ghādah al-Sammān and Sahar Khalīfah /Kifah Hanna -- Going Through Twentieth-Century Malta in the Company of Francis Ebejer’s Heroines /Bernadette Falzon -- Aesthetic (Dis)Continuities in the African Gendered Space: The Example of Younger Nigerian Women’s Writing /Taiwo Oloruntoba–Oju -- Smells, Skins, and Spices: Indian Spice Shops as Gendered Diasporic Spaces in the Novels of Indian Women Writers of the Diaspora /Christine Vogt–William -- Generational Change: Women and Writing in the Novels of Thea Astley /Maureen Lynch Pèrcopo -- Poems From Malta /Daniel Massa -- Currents and Swells in Maltese Identity: Representations of Community in Maltese Poetry in English Since Independence /Stella Borg Barthet -- Finding Nemo: Puzzling Maltese Identity in Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Murders in the Rue Morgue” /Kevin Stephen Magri -- The Sea and the Erosion of Cultural Identity in Romesh Gunesekera’s Reef /Melanie A. Murray -- The Otherless Other, or The Anonymity of Water: Unmapping Ondaatje’s ‘Sand Sea’ Self in Minghella’s The English Patient /Saviour Catania and Ivan Callus -- The Sea and the Changing Nature of Cultural Identity /Isabel Moutinho -- Diaspora in Cary Phillips’s Crossing the River (1993) /Thomas Bonnici -- “They Are Us” Interview with Caryl Phillips /Adrian Grima -- Sharing Media Spaces: The Kumars at No. 42 /Hilary P. Dannenberg -- Writing Second-Generation Migrant Identity in Meera Syal’s Fiction /Devon Campbell–Hall -- Is ‘Sharing Places’ Viable in a Postmodern World Order? Salman Rushdie’s Novel The Ground Beneath Her Feet /Amrit Biswas -- Sharing Nation Space: Representations of India /T. Vijay Kumar -- Exploring Boundaries: The North in Western Canadian Writing /Janne Korkka -- Sharing Quebec: Lorena Gale’s Je me souviens and George Elliott Clarke’s Québécité /Pilar Cuder–Domínguez -- Towards a Pedagogy of African-Canadian Literature /George Elliott Clarke -- Notes on Contributors -- Index. The present volume contains general essays on: unequal African/Western academic exchange; the state and structure of postcolonial studies; representing male violence in Zimbabwe’s wars; parihaka in the poetic imagination of Aotearoa New Zealand; Middle Eastern, Nigerian, Moroccan, and diasporic Indian women’s writing; community in post-Independence Maltese poetry in English; key novels of the Portuguese colonies; the TV series The Kumars at No. 42 ; fictional representations of India; the North in western Canadian writing; and a pedagogy of African-Canadian literature. As well as these, there is a selection of poems from Malta by Daniel Massa, Adrian Grima, Norbert Bugeja, Immanuel Mifsud, and Maria Grech Ganado, and essays providing close readings of works by the following authors and filmmakers: Thea Astley, George Elliott Clarke, Alan Duff, Francis Ebejer, Lorena Gale, Romesh Gunesekera, Sahar Khalīfah, Anthony Minghella, Michael Ondaatje, Caryl Phillips, Edgar Allan Poe, Salman Rushdie, Ghādah al-Sammān, Meera Syal, Lee Tamahori. Contributors: Leila Abouzeid, Hoda Barakat, Amrit Biswas, Thomas Bonnici, Stella Borg Barthet, Ivan Callus, Devon Campbell–Hall, Saviour Catania, George Elliott Clarke, Brian Crow, Pilar Cuder–Domínguez, Bärbel Czennia, Hilary P. Dannenberg, Pauline Dodgson–Katiyo, Bernadette Falzon, Daphne Grace, Adrian Grima, Kifah Hanna, Janne Korkka, T. Vijay Kumar, Chantal Kwast–Greff, Maureen Lynch Pèrcopo, Kevin Stephen Magri, Isabel Moutinho, Melanie A. Murray, Taiwo Oloruntoba–Oju, Gerhard Stilz, Jesús Varela Zapata, Christine Vogt–William

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9789042027671
    Other identifier:
    Corporations / Congresses:
    European Association for Commonwealth Literature and Language Studies (Conference)
    Series: Array ; 118
    Subjects: Postcolonialism in literature; Decolonization in literature; Comparative literature; Criticism; Comparative literature ; Themes, motives; Criticism; Decolonization in literature; Postcolonialism in literature; Conference papers and proceedings; History
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (xiii, 412 pages)
    Notes:

    Papers presented at the conference organized by the European Association for Commonwealth Literature and Language Studies held in March 2005 in Sliema, Malta

    Includes bibliographical references and index

  12. A sea for encounters
    essays towards a postcolonial commonwealth
    Published: 2009
    Publisher:  Rodopi, Amsterdam

    Preliminary Material -- The Relevance of Commonwealth Literature /Daniel Massa -- The Commitment Against Exclusion /Peter O. Stummer -- The Teaching of African Literature in the UK: Theoretical and Pedagogical Implications /Monica Bungaro -- Crossing... more

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    Preliminary Material -- The Relevance of Commonwealth Literature /Daniel Massa -- The Commitment Against Exclusion /Peter O. Stummer -- The Teaching of African Literature in the UK: Theoretical and Pedagogical Implications /Monica Bungaro -- Crossing the Borders in Monica Ali’s Brick Lane and V.S. Naipaul’s Half a Life /Jogamaya Bayer -- Transcultural Outlooks in The Buddha of Suburbia and Some Kind of Black /Sabrina Brancato -- Jewishness, Goyishness, and Blackness: Zadie Smith’s The Autograph Man /Gen’ichiro Itakura -- The Pleasures of Slave Food: The Politics of Creolization in Austin Clarke’s Pigtails ’n Breadfruit /Lourdes López–Ropero -- “The Most Motley Crewe in All the World”: Sharing Places in South Africa /Natasha Distiller -- Nadine Gordimer’s The Pickup: Immigration/Emigration in Today’s World /Ben Lebdai -- Cognitive Encounters: Priming the Reader for Cultural Contact /Susanne Reichl -- The Limitations of the Chronotope: Female Longing for Unconstrained Space in Yvonne Vera’s Butterfly Burning /Katrin Berndt -- Amit Chaudhuri’s Afternoon Raag: Interplay and Translation of the Chronotopes /Evelyne Hanquart–Turner -- Spatial Linearity and Postcolonial Parody in Murray Bail’s Holden’s Performance /Marie Herbillon -- In the Museum of Loss: Reflections on André Aciman’s Essays /Brigitte Scheer–Schaezler -- “Dominion From Sea to Sea”: Christianity, Imperialism and the Trope of Conversion /Dorothy Lane -- Sharing Male and Female Spaces: Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart /Karen King–Aribisala -- “You’re Not Only Drunk But Mad”: The Ironies of Islam in Tayib Salih’s Season of Migration to the North /Jamie S. Scott -- Nature Conservation and Cultural Preservation in Convergence: Orang Pendek and Papuans in Colonial Indonesia /Robert Cribb -- Colonial Encounters or Clash of Civilizations?: The Fiction of Naguib Mahfouz, Tayeb Salih, and Ahdaf Soueif /Amin Malak -- A British Napoleon Or, Can the Empire Strike Back?: Edward Atiyah’s The Eagle Flies from the East /Jacqueline Jondot -- The Personal and the Public: Michael Ondaatje’s Historiographic Metafiction and the Question of Political Engagement /Ursula Kluwick -- ‘True Stories’ in the Course of Time in Margaret Atwood’s The Blind Assassin /Andrea Strolz -- Rewriting Europe: Carey’s Jack Maggs and Malouf’s Remembering Babylon /Cynthia Vanden Driesen -- The Carnivalesque into Theatre: Carnival and Drama in the Anglophone Caribbean /Concepción Mengíbar Rico -- Ethics, Language, and the Writing of Amitav Ghosh /Tuomas Huttunen -- Identity and Instruction: Issues of Choice Between the Maltese Language and Its Others /Clare Thake Vassallo -- Different Genders, Different Conversation Styles?: Patterns of Interaction between Married Couples in Malta /Lydia Sciriha -- Translating Narrative in the New South Africa: Transition and Transformation in A Change of Tongue /Judith Lütge Coullie -- Notes on Contributors -- Index. The present volume contains general essays on: the relevance of ‘Commonwealth’ literature; the treatment of Dalits in literature and culture; the teaching of African literature in the UK; ‘sharing places’ and Drum magazine in South Africa; black British book covers as primers for cultural contact; Christianity, imperialism, and conversion; Orang Pendek and Papuans in colonial Indonesia; Carnival and drama in the anglophone Caribbean; issues of choice between the Maltese language and Its Others; and patterns of interaction between married couples in Malta. As well as these, there are essays providing close readings of works by the following authors: Chinua Achebe, André Aciman, Diran Adebayo, Monica Ali, Edward Atiyah, Margaret Atwood, Murray Bail, Peter Carey, Amit Chaudhuri, Austin Clarke, Sara Jeannette Duncan, Amitav Ghosh, Nadine Gordimer, Antjie Krog, Hanif Kureishi, Naguib Mahfouz, David Malouf, V.S. Naipaul, Michael Ondaatje, Tayeb Salih, Zadie Smith, Ahdaf Soueif, Yvonne Vera. Contributors: Jogamaya Bayer, Katrin Berndt, Sabrina Brancato, Monica Bungaro, Judith Lütge Coulli, Robert Cribb, Natasha Distiller, Evelyne Hanquart–Turner, Marie Herbillon, Tuomas Huttunen, Gen’ichiro Itakura, Jacqueline Jondot, Karen King–Aribisala, Ursula Kluwick, Dorothy Lane, Ben Lebdai, Lourdes López–Ropero, Amin Malak, Daniel Massa, Concepción Mengibar–Rico, Susanne Reichl, Brigitte Scheer–Schaezler, Lydia Sciriha, Jamie S. Scott, Andrea Strolz, Peter O. Stummer, Cynthia vanden Driesen, Clare Thake Vassallo

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9789042027657
    Other identifier:
    Series: Array ; 117
    Subjects: Commonwealth literature (English); Commonwealth fiction (English); Postcolonialism; Postcolonialism in literature; Commonwealth fiction (English); Commonwealth literature (English); Postcolonialism in literature; Postcolonialism; Conference papers and proceedings; Criticism, interpretation, etc
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (xiv, 412 pages)
    Notes:

    Includes bibliographical references and index

  13. Rites of passage in postcolonial women's writing
    Published: 2010
    Publisher:  Rodopi, Amsterdam

    Preliminary Material -- A State of Transition: Connotations of Pregnancy in Yvonne Vera’s Without a Name and Butterfly Burning /Katrin Berndt -- Nothing Like Motherhood: Barrenness, Abortion, and Infanticide in Yvonne Vera’s Fiction /Helen Cousins --... more

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    Preliminary Material -- A State of Transition: Connotations of Pregnancy in Yvonne Vera’s Without a Name and Butterfly Burning /Katrin Berndt -- Nothing Like Motherhood: Barrenness, Abortion, and Infanticide in Yvonne Vera’s Fiction /Helen Cousins -- Mourning and the Angel of History in Yvonne Vera’s The Stone Virgins /Alexandra W. Schultheis -- Women Writing AIDS in South Africa and Zimbabwe /Lizzy Attree -- Reclaiming Ritual: Feminist and Postcolonial Perspectives in Two Plays by Victoria Nalani Kneubuhl /Kimberly M. Jew -- “There are no harmless ways to remake oneself”: Re-Invention of Self in Bharati Mukherjee /Polina Mackay -- Mourning and Motherhood: Transforming Loss in Representations of Adivasi Mothers in Mahasweta Devi’s Short Stories /Lopamudra Basu -- Intimations of Metamodernism: Innocence and Experience in Arundhati Roy’s The God of Small Things /Alexandra Dumitrescu -- “No one knows that I have magic / In my brain”: Jean Arasanayagam’s Writing and Re-writing as Rites of Passage /Sharanya Jayawickrama -- “A Ticket to Nowhere”: Coming-of-Age in Two Twentieth-Century Indigenous Australian Memoirs /Gay Breyley -- Transitions: Rites of Passage as Border Crossings in Contemporary Australian Women’s Fiction /Rachel Slater -- Fate, Femininity and Mourning in Jean Rhys’s Good Morning, Midnight /Jessica Gildersleeve -- Coming-of-Age, Coming to Mourning: Purple Hibiscus, Lucy, and Nervous Conditions /Tanya Dalziell -- Menstrual Metamorphosis and the “foreign country of femaleness”: Kate Grenville and Jamaica Kincaid /Anna Gething -- Words Against Death: Rites of Passage in Ana Castillo’s So Far From God and Patricia Grace’s Baby No-Eyes /Irene Visser -- Notes on Contributors. This volume brings a variety of new approaches and contexts to modern and contemporary women’s writing. Contributors include both new and well-established scholars from Europe, Australia, the USA, and the Caribbean. Their essays draw on, adapt, and challenge anthropological perspectives on rites of passage derived from the work of Arnold van Gennep and Victor Turner. Collectively, the essays suggest that women’s writing and women’s experiences from diverse cultures go beyond any straightforward notion of a threefold structure of separation, transition, and incorporation. Some essays include discussion of traditional rites of passage such as birth, motherhood, marriage, death, and bereavement; others are interested in exploring less traditional, more fluid, and/or problematic rites such as abortion, living with HIV/AIDS, and coming into political consciousness. Contributors seek ways of linking writing on rites of passage to feminist, postcolonial, and psychoanalytic theories which foreground margins, borders, and the outsider. The three opening essays explore the work of the Zimbabwean writer Yvonne Vera, whose groundbreaking work explored taboo subjects such as infanticide and incest. A wide range of other essays focus on writers from Africa, the Americas, Asia, Australia, and Europe, including Jean Rhys, Bharati Mukherjee, Arundhati Roy, Jean Arasanayagam, Victoria Nalani Kneubuhl, and Eva Sallis. Rites of Passage in Postcolonial Women’s Writing will be of interest to scholars working in the fields of postcolonial and modern and contemporary women’s writing, and to students on literature and women’s studies courses who want to study women’s writing from a cross-cultural perspective and from different theoretical positions. Contributors: Lizzy Attree, Lopamudra Basu, Katrin Berndt, Gay Breyley, Helen Cousins, Tanya Dalziell, Alexandra Dumitrescu, Anna Gething, Jessica Gildersleeve, Sharanya Jayawickrama, Kimberley M. Jew, Polina Mackay, Alexandra W. Schultheis, Rachel Slater, Irene Visser

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9789042029361
    Other identifier:
    Series: Cross/cultures ; 123
    Subjects: Literature; Literature, Modern; Postcolonialism in literature; Literature, Modern; Literature ; Women authors; Postcolonialism in literature; Criticism, interpretation, etc
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (xvi, 307 pages)
    Notes:

    Includes bibliographical references

  14. The worldly scholar
    Published: 2012
    Publisher:  Rodopi B.V, Amsterdam

    Preliminary Material -- Literature as a Rule-Breaking Activity /Erhard Reckwitz -- Construction of Identities, Polar Opposites, and Cultural Models: The Binary Approach to Cultural Interaction /Sven Strasen and Peter Wenzel -- What Happens in the... more

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    Preliminary Material -- Literature as a Rule-Breaking Activity /Erhard Reckwitz -- Construction of Identities, Polar Opposites, and Cultural Models: The Binary Approach to Cultural Interaction /Sven Strasen and Peter Wenzel -- What Happens in the ‘Contact Zone?’ /Gerhard Stilz -- Endangered Languages and Dispossessed Communities /Ganesh Devy -- Ecocriticism, Environmental Ethics, and a New Ecological Culture /Norbert H. Platz -- Extreme Liminality: The Linked Stories of Édouard, Juliette, and Lena in Mavis Gallant’s Overhead in a Balloon /Kristjana Gunnars -- Move the Earth with One’s Dramatic Shovel?: Some Observations on Recent Plays in Canada and Beyond /Peter O. Stummer -- Fanciful Indigeneity /Terry Goldie -- Between European Past and Canadian Present: Lesbian Mennonite Writing and Collective Memory /Martin Kuester -- Entropy and the Totally Buried Home in Jane Urquhart’s A Map of Glass /David Callahan -- “Under a pillar of rain / thinking goodbye”: Remembering Kamala Das /Devindra Kohli -- “Bubbles into the Bottle” of Postcolonialism: Ritornellos and Screen-Memories in Arundhati Roy’s The God of Small Things /Béatrice Bijon -- The Materialization and Transformation of Xavier Herbert: A Body of Work Committed to Australia /Russell Mcdougall -- The Phantom and Transgenerational Trauma in Elizabeth Jolley’s The Well /Dolores Herrero -- Due Preparations for Paradise: or, The Plague Now According to Hany Abu-Assad and Janette Turner Hospital /Helga Ramsey–Kurz -- “Grace of the Crocodiles”: Towards Deterritorialization of Culture in Robert Drewe’s Grace /Marc Delrez -- Lives of Artists, Identities of Countries: Dependence, Displacement, Identity, and Australia in Peter Carey’s Theft /Jaroslav Kušnír -- Positioning Alterity: Multi-Ethnic Identities in Contemporary New Zealand Drama /Marc Maufort -- Ut pictura poiesis: Paintings and Painters in the Poetry of Peter Bland /Peter H. Marsden -- A Play of Significance: Roy Williams’s Days of Significance and the Question of Labels /Bénédicte Ledent -- Postcolonizing Glasgow’s Amnesia: Alasdair Gray’s Lanark as a Palimpsest of Scottish Imperial History /Carla Sassi -- A Foreigner at Home: Morrissey and the Art of Embarrassment /Gavin Hopps -- Zweig’s Englishmen /David Midgley -- “Mr Davis’s Monument, or Dear Mr Davis, what shall I do?”: Lobpreisung – ein Glückwunsch für Geoffrey V. Davis aus festlichem Anlass /Arnold Zweig and Deborah Vietor–Engländer -- The Enigma of Hitler: Counterfactual Perspectives /Ian Wallace -- A Tale of Two Cities /Dennis Haskell -- Onto the Spin Cycle /Geoff Goodfellow -- The Day Collector: An Ode /Michael Sharkey -- Canada Quartet for Geoff /Gordon Collier -- Travelogue /Anne Brewster -- Karri forest /Andrew Taylor -- The Way to Agra; or Nature’s Pain Everywhere /Pia Thielmann -- from this side of memory (for geoff davis) /Kirpal Singh -- Notes on Contributors. This collection ranges far and wide, as befits the personality and accomplishments of the dedicatee, Geoffrey V. Davis, German studies and exile literature scholar, postcolonialist (if there are ‘specialties’, then Australia, Canada, India, South Africa, Black Britain), journal and book series editor.... The volume opens with essays on cultural theory and practice, proceeds to close analyses of ‘settler colony’ texts from Canada, India, Australia, and New Zealand (drama, fiction, and poetry) as well as Pacific drama and Canadian indigeneity, thence ‘homeward’ to the UK (black drama, Scottish fiction, the music of Morrissey) and to German themes (exile literature; fictions about Hitler). Because Geoff’s commitment to literature has always been ‘hands-on’, the book closes with a selection of poems and experimental prose. Writers discussed include Carmen Aguirre, Hany Abu-Assad, Beryl Bainbridge, Albert Belz, Peter Bland, Peter Carey, Lynda Chanwai–Earle, Kamala Das, Robert Drewe, Éric Emmanuel–Schmitt, Toa Fraser, Stephen Fry, Dianna Fuemana, Mavis Gallant, Alasdair Gray, Xavier Her¬bert, Janette Turner Hospital, Elizabeth Jolley, Wendy Lill, Varanasi Nagalakshmi, Arundhati Roy, Daniel Sloate, Drew Hayden Taylor, Jane Urquhart, Roy Williams, and Arnold Zweig

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9789401207850
    Other identifier:
    Series: Cross/cultures ; 149
    Engaging with literature of commitment ; v. 2
    Subjects: English fiction; English fiction; Postcolonialism in literature; English fiction; Postcolonialism in literature; Criticism, interpretation, etc
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (415 pages)
    Notes:

    Includes bibliographical references

  15. Espace méditerranéen
    écritures de l'exil, migrances et discours postcolonial
    Published: 2014
    Publisher:  Rodopi, Amsterdam

    Preliminary Material -- Écrire l’exil et la migrance à l’ère postcoloniale /Jean-Marc Moura and Vasiliki Lalagianni -- Le harem méditerranéen : la femme écrivaine face à un espace de rêve ou un espace d’exil culturel et personnel /Margarita Alfaro --... more

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    Preliminary Material -- Écrire l’exil et la migrance à l’ère postcoloniale /Jean-Marc Moura and Vasiliki Lalagianni -- Le harem méditerranéen : la femme écrivaine face à un espace de rêve ou un espace d’exil culturel et personnel /Margarita Alfaro -- Le bassin méditerranéen, espace d’errances topographiques et de dérives énonciatives chez Andrée Chedid /Beatriz Mangada -- De Beyrouth à Montréal, Abla Farhoud : la voix de l’exil et de la solitude /Arzu Etensel Ildem -- De l’errance géographique au nomadisme littéraire : le cas de Vénus Khoury-Ghata /Ilaria Vitali -- Navigations textuelles des femmes marocaines dans l’espace méditerranéen : mémoires, mères, monde /Alison Rice -- Écrire la guerre, la migration et l’exil : voix des femmes du Liban et de Croatie /Cheryl Toman -- Exil et mémoire traumatique dans les écrits de Mimika Kranaki et d’Aline Apostolska /Vasiliki Lalagianni -- Déchantement postcolonial et migrance dans les écrits de Boualem Sansal /Elena-Brandusa Steiciuc -- Le « mythe » de El Greco exilé dans la culture néohellénique /Georges Fréris -- L’exil et la quête du paradis dans l’œuvre de Georges Schehadé /Antoine Sassine -- Trauma, identité nationale et discours postcolonial dans Portes Closes de Costas Montis /Louisa Christodoulidou -- Le discours postcolonial chez quelques écrivains maghrébins de langue française : autour des libérations /Adelaida Porras Medrano -- Dire le retour sans le dire tout en le disant : Nouvelle configuration des motifs exiliques et d’expatriation /Odile Cazenave -- De la critique et des lettres postcoloniales dans l’aire euro-méditerranéenne Désert de J.M.G. Le Clézio et L’Enfant de sable de Tahar Ben Jelloun /Jean-Marc Moura -- Contributeurs et contributrices -- Table des matières. À l’ère postcoloniale, les littératures de la migration et de l’exil se sont considérablement développées dans les pays de la Méditerranée qui ont connu, sous des formes diverses, le colonialisme, les guerres d’indépendance, puis la décolonisation. « Espace-mouvement » autour de trois aires culturelles, la chrétienté, le monde orthodoxe et la oumma musulmane, la Méditerranée a connu nombre d’affrontements, de heurts et de bouleversements identitaires. Au-delà de la crainte et de la méfiance nées de cette histoire, il existe une capacité d’invention renouvelée manifestée par les textes des écrivains issus des différents pays méditerranéens: Algérie, Chypre, Croatie, Égypte, Grèce, Liban, Maroc, Tunisie. À la lumière de la critique postcoloniale, Espace méditerranéen : écritures de l’exil, migrances et discours postcolonial analyse la dimension politique de ces œuvres et le rôle qu’a pu jouer la découverte de cultures différentes – à travers la migration, l’exil, l’expatriation – dans le parcours de certains écrivains ou penseurs caractérisés par une double appartenance. Les auteurs de cet ouvrage s’attachent donc à montrer les complexités mais aussi tout l’intérêt des écritures de l’exil et de la migrance à la croisée des cultures et des langues de la Méditerranée contemporaine

     

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  16. Postcolonial studies across the disciplines
    Published: [2013]
    Publisher:  Rodopi, Amsterdam

    Preliminary Material -- Postcolonial Studies and Atlantic Studies: Interdisciplinary Reflections on Slavery and Empire /Tim Watson -- Postcolonial Textiles: Negotiating Dialogue /Jessica Hemmings -- Masking the White Gaze: Towards a Postcolonial Art... more

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    Preliminary Material -- Postcolonial Studies and Atlantic Studies: Interdisciplinary Reflections on Slavery and Empire /Tim Watson -- Postcolonial Textiles: Negotiating Dialogue /Jessica Hemmings -- Masking the White Gaze: Towards a Postcolonial Art History of Masks /Melanie Ulz -- From Bush Talk to Nation Language: Language Attitudes in Jamaica Before and After Independence /Andrea Sand -- Track Studies: Popular Music and Postcolonial Analysis /Johannes Ismaiel–Wendt -- Postcolonial Cultural Studies: Writing a Zulu Woman Back Into History /Ellen Grünkemeier -- Postcolonial Pursuits in African American Studies: The Later Poems of Claude McKay /Timo Müller -- “Mainly Story-Telling and Play-Acting”: Theatricality and the Middle Passage in Barry Unsworth’s Sacred Hunger /Carl Plasa -- Negotiating Family Models in Jamaican Literature: Class, Race, and Religion /Henning Marquardt -- Transatlantic Representations of the Revolution in Saint-Domingue at the End of the Eighteenth Century and the Haitian Turn /Anja Bandau -- Writing Off-Centre: Global Imagination and Modernism in the Short Fiction of Phyllis Shand Allfrey /Sarah Fekadu -- Emancipation and Protest: Moravian Mission and the Labour Strike in St Kitts /Jan Hüsgen -- The Perspectives of African Elites on Slavery and Abolition on the Gold Coast (1860–1900): Newspapers as Sources /Steffen Runkel -- Fragile Modernities: History and Historiography in Contemporary African Fiction /Frank Schulze–Engler -- Historiographic Indian English Fiction: Indira Gandhi’s Emergency Rule in Midnight’s Children, The Great Indian Novel, and A Fine Balance /Matthias Galler -- Kaliyattam (The Play of God) by Jayaraj: Polymorphous and Postcolonial Poetics in an Indian Othello-Adaptation /Cecile Sandten -- Othering Otherness: Stephen Muecke’s Fictocriticism and the Cosmopolitan Vision /Dennis Mischke -- The (Inter)Disciplinarity of Postcolonial Research /Ursula Kluwick -- Lessons for A-Disciplinarity: Some Notes on What Happens to an Americanist When She Takes Slavery Seriously /Sabine Broeck -- Postcolonial Studies as a Discipline: An External Perspective on Administrative Headaches /Janou Glencross -- On the Challenge of De-Provincializing the University Classroom: Teaching African History from a Postcolonial Perspective /Brigitte Reinwald -- Studying Anglophone Literatures and Cultures in a World of Globalized Modernity: Notes on the ‘Frankfurt Experience’ /Frank Schulze–Engler -- Postcolonial Readings in German Secondary Education /Elinor Jane Pohl -- Cross-Cultural Pedagogical Practices: Understanding the German Context /Mala Pandurang -- Teaching India in the German EFL Classroom: Issues and Problems /Reinhold Wandel -- Notes on Contributors. Bringing together contributions from various disciplines and academic fields, this collection engages in interdisciplinary dialogue on postcolonial issues. Covering African, anglophone, Romance, and New-World themes, linguistic, literary, and cultural studies, and historiography, music, art history, and textile studies, the volume raises questions of (inter)disciplinarity, methodology, and entangled histories. The essays focus on the representation of slavery in the transatlantic world (the USA, Jamaica, Haiti, and the wider Caribbean, West Africa, and the UK). Drawing on a range of historical sources, material objects, and representations, they study Jamaican Creole, African masks, knitted objects, patchwork sculpture, newspapers, films, popular music, and literature of different genres from the Caribbean, West and South Africa, India, and Britain. At the same time, they reflect on theoretical problems such as intertextuality, intermediality, and cultural exchange, and explore intersections – postcolonial literature and transatlantic history; postcolonial and African-American studies; postcolonial literary and cultural studies. The final section keys in with the overall aim of challenging established disciplinary modes of knowledge production: exploring schools and universities as locations of postcolonial studies. Teachers investigate the possibilities and limits of their respective institutions and probe new ways of engaging with postcolonial concerns. With its integrative, interdisciplinary focus, this collection addresses readers interested in understanding how colonization and globalization have influenced societies and cultures around the world. Contributors: Anja Bandau, Sabine Broeck, Sarah Fekadu, Matthias Galler, Janou Glencross, Jana Gohrisch, Ellen Grünkemeier, Jessica Hemmings, Jan Hüsgen, Johannes Salim Ismaiel–Wendt, Ursula Kluwick, Henning Marquardt, Dennis Mischke, Timo Müller, Mala Pandurang, Carl Plasa, Elinor Jane Pohl, Brigitte Reinwald, Steffen Runkel, Andrea Sand, Cecile Sandten, Frank Schulze–Engler, Melanie Ulz, Reinhold Wandel, Tim Watson

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9789401210027
    Other identifier:
    Corporations / Congresses:
    Gesellschaft für die Neuen Englischsprachigen Literaturen (Annual Conference)
    Series: Cross/cultures ; 170
    ASNEL papers ; 18
    Subjects: Postcolonialism; Postcolonialism in literature; Postcolonialism and the arts; Postcolonialism; Postcolonialism and the arts; Postcolonialism in literature
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (xxx, 406 pages), color illustrations
    Notes:

    Includes bibliographical references

  17. Speaking the Earth's languages
    a theory for Australian-Chilean postcolonial poetics
    Published: 2013
    Publisher:  Rodopi, Amsterdam

    Preliminary Material -- Where to Begin? -- Judith Wright and the Limits of Her Tradition -- Pablo Neruda and Complex Topography -- Reading Complexity -- Leonel Lienlaf and the Potential of Song -- Paddy Roe’s Nomad Poetics -- The Non-Limited... more

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    Preliminary Material -- Where to Begin? -- Judith Wright and the Limits of Her Tradition -- Pablo Neruda and Complex Topography -- Reading Complexity -- Leonel Lienlaf and the Potential of Song -- Paddy Roe’s Nomad Poetics -- The Non-Limited Locality: Paulo Huirimilla with Lionel Fogarty -- Imagining Syntheses -- Coda -- An Introduction to Mapuche Poetry -- “Ríos de cisnes,” by Paulo Huirimilla -- Works Cited -- Index. Speaking the Earth’s Languages brings together for the first time critical discussions of postcolonial poetics from Australia and Chile. The book crosses multiple languages, landscapes, and disciplines, and draws on a wide range of both oral and written poetries, in order to make strong claims about the importance of ‘a nomad poetics’ – not only for understanding Aboriginal or Mapuche writing practices but, more widely, for the problems confronting contemporary literature and politics in colonized landscapes. The book begins by critiquing canonical examples of non-indigenous postcolonial poetics. Incisive re-readings of two icons of Australian and Chilean poetry, Judith Wright (1915–2000) and Pablo Neruda (1904–1973), provide rich insights into non-indigenous responses to colonization in the wake of modernity. The second half of the book establishes compositional links between Aboriginal and Mapuche poetics, and between such oral and written poetics more generally. The book’s final part develops an ‘emerging synthesis’ of contemporary Aboriginal and Mapuche poetics, with reference to the work of two of the most important avant-garde Aboriginal and Mapuche poets of recent times, Lionel Fogarty (1958–) and Paulo Huirimilla (1973–). Speaking the Earth’s Languages uses these fascinating links between Aboriginal and Mapuche poetics as the basis of a deliberately nomadic, open-ended theory for an Australian–Chilean postcolonial poetics. “The central argument of this book,” the author writes, “is that a nomadic poetics is essential for a genuinely postcolonial form of habitation, or a habitation of colonized landscapes that doesn’t continue to replicate colonialist ideologies involving indigenous dispossession and environmental exploitation.”

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9789401209168
    Other identifier:
    Series: Cross/Cultures - Readings in post/colonial literatures and cultures in English ; 159
    Subjects: Postcolonialism in literature; Postcolonialism in literature
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (xiii, 337 pages)
    Notes:

    Includes bibliographical references (p. 311-320) and index

  18. Bodies and voices
    the force-field of representation and discourse in colonial and postcolonial studies
    Published: 2008
    Publisher:  Rodopi, Amsterdam

    Preliminary Material -- Martyred Bodies and Silenced Voices in South African Literature Under Apartheid /André Viola -- Postcolonial Disgrace: (White) Women and (White) Guilt in the “New” South Africa /Georgina Horrell -- Identity: Bodies and Voices... more

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    Preliminary Material -- Martyred Bodies and Silenced Voices in South African Literature Under Apartheid /André Viola -- Postcolonial Disgrace: (White) Women and (White) Guilt in the “New” South Africa /Georgina Horrell -- Identity: Bodies and Voices in Coetzee’s Disgrace and Bouraoui’s Garçon manqué /Benaouda Lebdai -- From “Cutting Without Ritual” to “Ritual Without Cutting”: Voicing and Remembering the Excised Body in African Texts and Contexts /Chantal Zabus -- A Woman’s Body on Fire: Yvonne Vera’s Butterfly Burning /Maya G. Vinuesa -- Ritual Theatre: Bodies and Voices /Rosa Figueiredo -- The Clothing Metaphor as a Signifier of Alienation in the Fiction of Karen King–Aribisala /Eleonora Chiavetta -- Representations of Africa and Black Africans in the Poetry of Noel Brettell /Gregory Hacksley -- Of a ‘Voice’ and ‘Bodies’: A Postcolonial Critique of Meena Alexander’s Nampally Road /Aparajita Nanda -- Can Women Speak? Can the Female Body Talk?: Speech and Anatomical Discourse in Githa Hariharan’s When Dreams Travel /Maria Sofia Pimentel Biscaia -- Unpacking Imperial Crates of Subalternity: The Indian Immigrant Labourer of Colonial Malaya /Shanthini Pillai -- Tinggayun: Implications of Dance and Song in Bajau Society /Saidatul Nornis Haji Mahali -- “Keeping Body and Soul Together”: Rukhsana Ahmad’s Critical Examinations of Female Body Politics in Pakistan and Britain /Christiane Schlote -- Arthur Waley’s The Way and Its Power: Representation of ‘the Other’ /Hsiu-Chen Jane Chang -- Bodies and Voices in Michael Ondaatje’s The English Patient and Anil’s Ghost /Carla Comellini -- Blurring Bodies/Blurring Borders: David Cronenberg Strikes Back /Marta Dvorak -- “Never Forget that the Kanakas Are Men”: Fictional Representations of the Enslaved Black Body /Carole Ferrier -- Metamorphic Bodies and Mongrel Subjectivities in Mudrooroo’s The Undying /Annalisa Oboe -- Voicing the Body: The Cancer Poems of Philip Hodgins /Werner Senn -- A Voice of One’s Own: Language as Central Element of Resistance, Reintegration and Reconstruction of Identity in the Fiction of Patricia Grace /Ulla Ratheiser -- Suffering and Survival: Body and Voice in Recent Maori Writing /Janet Wilson -- Postcolonial Education and Afro-Trinidadian Social Exclusion /Derren Joseph -- Voice as a Carnivalesque Strategy in West Indian Literature: Sam Selvon’s The Lonely Londoners and Moses Ascending /Giselle Rampaul -- The Representation of Oppressed (Corpo)realities: Cripples, Dwarfs and Blind Men in the Plays of Edgar Nkosi White /Núria Casado Gual -- Between Aphasia and Articulateness – Alien-Nation and Belonging: National/Ethnic Identities in Selected Black British Novels /Susanne Pichler -- (Re)membering the Disembodied Verse: Constructs of Identity in Contemporary Irish Women’s Poetry /Carmen Zamorano Llena -- “Scotland, Whit Like?”: Coloured Voices in Historical Territories /Carla Rodríguez González -- The Smeared Metaphor: Viscosity and Fluidity in Bataille’s Story of the Eye /José María de La Torre -- Confrontational and Sociometric Approaches to Reform Strategy in German and Nigerian Prisons: Convergences and Divergences /Emman Frank Idoko. A wide-ranging collection of essays centred on readings of the body in contemporary literary and socio-anthropological discourse, from slavery and rape to female genital mutilation, from clothing, ocular pornography, voice, deformation and transmutation to the imprisoned, dismembered, remembered, abducted or ghostly body, in Africa, Australasia and the Pacific, Canada, the Caribbean, Great Britain and Eire

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9789401205351
    Other identifier:
    Series: Array ; 94
    Subjects: Human body in literature; Literature; Human body; Postcolonialism in literature; Imperialism in literature; Human body in literature; Human body ; Social aspects; Imperialism in literature; Literature; Postcolonialism in literature; Conference papers and proceedings; Criticism, interpretation, etc
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (xl, 459 pages)
    Notes:

    Includes bibliographical references and index

  19. Relocating consciousness
    diasporic writers and the dynamics of literary experience
    Published: 2007
    Publisher:  Rodopi, Amsterdam

    Preliminary Material /Daphne Grace -- Readdressing Consciousness, Locating Diasporas /Daphne Grace -- Exploring Self and Other: Theories of Consciousness /Daphne Grace -- Trauma, Terror and the Impact of Consciousness /Daphne Grace -- Empire,... more

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    Preliminary Material /Daphne Grace -- Readdressing Consciousness, Locating Diasporas /Daphne Grace -- Exploring Self and Other: Theories of Consciousness /Daphne Grace -- Trauma, Terror and the Impact of Consciousness /Daphne Grace -- Empire, Violence, and the Writing of History /Daphne Grace -- The Self-Reflexive World: Consciousness and Social Responsibility /Daphne Grace -- African Explorations of the Sacred and the Self /Daphne Grace -- The Literature of Human Survival: Envisaging Alternatives /Daphne Grace -- Encounters in the Earthly Paradise: Relocating the Self /Daphne Grace -- Cosmopolitanism, Political Conscience and Higher Consciousness /Daphne Grace -- Bibliography /Daphne Grace -- Index /Daphne Grace. This book deals directly with issues of consciousness within works of postcolonial and diasporic writers. It discusses fiction, autobiography and theory to re-formulate a “writing of consciousness”, addressing contemporary cultural theory related to a wide range of dynamic writers and ground-breaking novels. A critical analysis of literature contextualises consciousness (understood here as the source of language and human creativity), and explores ways in which consciousness is involved in the creative process. Tackling the controversial nature of consciousness itself, the book argues that consciousness must be understood in its philosophical and social contexts. The idea of relocating consciousness calls for a new aesthetics and ethics of living in the diasporic world where we are all to some extent “migrant”. The book explores notions of consciousness as alternative narrative structures to society, while expanding contemporary postcolonial theory beyond the limited dimension of power-based-on-violence to a more visionary exploration of experience based on consciousness as unity-in-diversity. Themes explored include sacred experience as empowerment; trauma, terror and the impact of consciousness; cosmopolitanism and globalisation; and the literature of human survival. Written in a lively and accessible manner the book will appeal to all readers who enjoy being on the cutting-edge of contemporary world literature

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9789401204804
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    Series: Consciousness, literature & the arts ; 7
    Subjects: Postcolonialism in literature; Consciousness in literature; English literature; Emigration and immigration in literature; Consciousness in literature; Emigration and immigration in literature; English literature; Postcolonialism in literature; Criticism, interpretation, etc
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (252 pages)
    Notes:

    Includes bibliographical references (p. 235-246) and index

  20. Global fragments
    (dis)orientation in the new world order
    Published: 2007
    Publisher:  Rodopi, Amsterdam

    Preliminary Material -- Contemporary Asian-Australian Identities — Hsu–Ming Teo’s Love and Vertigo /Russell West–Pavlov -- Understanding Departure — A Study of Select Pre-Migration Indian Female Subjectivities /Mala Pandurang -- Black, Asian, and... more

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    Preliminary Material -- Contemporary Asian-Australian Identities — Hsu–Ming Teo’s Love and Vertigo /Russell West–Pavlov -- Understanding Departure — A Study of Select Pre-Migration Indian Female Subjectivities /Mala Pandurang -- Black, Asian, and Other British — Transcultural Literature and the Discreet Charm of Ethnicity /Frank Schulze–Engler -- Indian Diaspora Meets Indo-chic — Fragmentation, Fashion, and Resistance in Meera Syal’s Life Isn’t All Ha Ha Hee Hee /Mita Banerjee -- Bhangra Babes — ‘Masala’ Music and Questions of Identity and Integration in South Asian-British Women’s Writing /Christine Vogt–William -- Bhangra Babes — ‘Masala’ Music and Questions of Identity and Integration in South Asian-British Women’s Writing /Christine Vogt–William -- AIDS, Pornography, and Conspicuous Consumption — Media Strategies of an HIV/AIDS Prevention Campaign in South Africa /Ulrike Kistner -- The Global Bidding for Dorothy Gale’s Magical Shoes — Salman Rushdie’s “At the Auction of the Ruby Slippers” as a (Self-)Reflection on the Post-Frontier Predicament /Justyna Deszcz–Tryhubczak -- Imagining Indians — Subverting Global Media Politics in the Local Media /Kerstin Knopf -- Of Warriors, a Whalerider, and Venetians — Contemporary Māori Films /Dieter Riemenschneider -- Teaming Multitudes — Lagaan and the Nation in Globality /Dirk Wiemann -- “Blanched Bones, Mouldering Graves and Potent Spells” — White Constructions of Black Diasporic Rituals in Slave Culture /Kirsten Raupach -- Scotland as a Multifractured Postcolonial Go-Between? — Ambiguous Interfaces Between (Post-)Celticism, Gaelicness, Scottishness and Postcolonialism. /Silke Stroh -- Universal Matters; Universals Matter /Tabish Khair -- Local Knowledge – Global Resistance — Policies of a New Technological “Enlightenment” /Frank Lay -- Networks of the Media — Media Cultures, Connectivity and Globalization /Andreas Hepp -- At the Periphery of the Periphery — Children’s Literature, Global and Local /Emer O’Sullivan -- Dialect Representation versus Linguistic Stereotype in Literature — Three Examples from Indian South African English /Rajend Mesthrie -- Camfranglais — A Language with Several (Sur)Faces and Important Sociolinguistic Functions /Anne Schröder -- Henry Lawson’s “The Drover’s Wife” and the Australian Short Story /Liesel Hermes -- West Meets East / East Meets West? — Teaching William Sutcliffe’s Cult Novel Are You Experienced? (1997) /Laurenz Volkmann -- Read the Texts and Let Them Speak, Too — Teaching New Zealand Poetry in the Sixth Form /Claudia Duppé and Manfred Gantner -- Teaching the New South Africa — The Cartoon Strip Madam and Eve /Gisela Feurle -- Notes on Contributors. While the world seems to be getting ever smaller and globalization has become the ubiquitous buzz-word, regionalism and fragmentation also abound. This might be due to the fact that, far from being the alleged production of cultural homogeneity, the global is constantly re-defined and altered through the local. This tension, pervading much of contemporary culture, has an obvious special relevance for the new varieties of English and the literature published in English world-wide. Postcolonial literatures exist at the interface of English as a hegemonic medium and its many national, regional and local competitors that transform it in the new English literatures. Thus any exploration of a globalization of cultures has to take into account the fact that culture is a complex field characterized by hybridization, plurality, and difference. But while global or transnational cultures may allow for a new cosmopolitanism that produces ever-changing, fluid identities, they do not give rise to an egalitarian ‘global village’ – an asymmetry between centre and periphery remains largely intact, albeit along new parameters. The essays collected in this volume offer readings of literary, theoretical, and filmic texts from the postcolonial world. These texts are read as attempts to articulate the global with the local from a perspective of immersion in the actual diversity of life-worlds, focusing on such issues as consumption, identity-politics, and modes of affiliation. In this sense, they are global fragments: locally refractured figurations of an experience of world-wide interconnectedness

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9789401204224
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    Series: Cross/cultures ; 90
    ASNEL papers ; 10
    Subjects: Literature and globalization; Postcolonialism in literature; Literature and globalization; Postcolonialism in literature; Conference papers and proceedings
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (xvii, 361 pages), illustrations
    Notes:

    "This volume presents a collection of papers read at the international conference 'Global Fragments: (Dis)orientation in the New World Order' held at Magdeburg in May 2003"--Page x

    Includes bibliographical references

  21. Readings of the particular
    the postcolonial in the postnational
    Published: 2007
    Publisher:  Rodopi, Amsterdam

    Preliminary Material -- Have Culture, Will Travel: Cultural Citizenship and the Imagined Communities of Diaspora; a Fiction /WENCHE OMMUNDSEN -- ‘Beur’ Narratives of Self-Identity: Beyond Boundaries and Binaries /PRISCILLA RINGROSE -- Allegories of... more

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    Preliminary Material -- Have Culture, Will Travel: Cultural Citizenship and the Imagined Communities of Diaspora; a Fiction /WENCHE OMMUNDSEN -- ‘Beur’ Narratives of Self-Identity: Beyond Boundaries and Binaries /PRISCILLA RINGROSE -- Allegories of Ambivalence: Scottish Fiction, Britain and Empire /ALAN FREEMAN -- The Need to Storify: Re-inventing the Past in André Brink’s Novels /UTE KAUER -- The Postcolonial Border: Bessie Head’s “The Wind and a Boy” /JOHAN SCHIMANSKI -- The Intimate Presence of Death in the Novels of Zakes Mda: Necrophilic Worlds and Traditional Belief /DAVID BELL -- Controlling Jean Rhys’s Story “On Not Shooting Sitting Birds” /ULLA RAHBEK -- Isaac Julien’s Looking For Langston and the Limits of the Visible World /ASBJØRN GRØNSTAD -- Western Theatrical Performance in Africa and Gender Implications /EVELYN LUTWAMA -- Imagining a Nation: The Necessity of Producing Canadian Drama /ANNE NOTHOF -- The Mask of Aaron: “Tall screams reared out of Three Mile Plains”: Shakespeare’s Titus Andronicus and George Elliott Clarke’s Black Acadian Tragedy, Execution Poems /SUSAN KNUTSON -- Crossing the Boundary, Donning a Mask: Spatial Rules and Identity in Daniel David Moses’ and Tomson Highway’s Plays /KRISTINA AURYLAITĖ -- I Think I Could Turn Awhile /GEOFF PAGE -- How to Really Forget: David Dabydeen’s “Creative Amnesia” /ERIK FALK -- Many Masks, Big Houses: Yeats and the Construction of an Irish Identity /CHARLES ARMSTRONG -- Transtextual Conceptualizations of Northern Ireland: Paul Muldoon vs Seamus Heaney /RUBEN MOI -- (Un)Masking Possibilities: Bigger Thomas, Invisible Man, and Scooter /JACQUELYNNE MODESTE -- Notes on Contributors -- Index. The present collection aims at throwing light on transculturality and the identities and masks that people put on, in writing as much as in life, in an age of global levelling and the struggle for a particular place in a postcolonial world. Topics covered include: North African identity in France; cultural citizenship and the Asian diaspora; novels of beur self-identity by Maghrebi immigrants in France; Scottish fiction, Britain and Empire; memory, amnesia, and the re-invention of the past in South Africa, the Caribbean and elsewhere; borders, necrophilia and history in Southern African fiction; encodings of female control; spectating in black documentary cinema; theatre, performance, and the Western presence in Africa; masks, history, transtextuality, and other aspects of Irish poetry and drama; the masking and unmasking of identity in the African-American novel; violence and Titus Andronicus in black Nova Scotian poetry; notions of the national and of indigeneity in contemporary Canadian drama; Native Canadians, space, and the city. Authors and artists treated include: William Boyd; André Brink; George Elliott Clarke; David Dabydeen; Ralph Ellison; Bessie Head; Seamus Heaney; Tomson Highway; Isaac Julien; Daniel David Moses; Paul Muldoon; Albert Murray; Jean Rhys; Sir Walter Scott; Robert Louis Stevenson; Richard Wright; and W.B. Yeats

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9789401204071
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    Series: Cross/cultures ; 89
    Subjects: Postcolonialism in literature; Postcolonialism; Nationalism and literature; Postcolonialism in literature; Nationalism and literature; Postcolonialism
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (xiv, 262 pages)
    Notes:

    Includes bibliographical references and index

  22. Reconstructing Hybridity
    Post-Colonial Studies in Transition
    Published: 2007
    Publisher:  Rodopi, Amsterdam

    Preliminary Material -- Hybridity Today /Joel Kuortti and Jopi Nyman -- Hybridity and Cultural Rights: Inventing Global Citizenship /David Huddart -- White Fatigue, or, Supplementary Notes on Hybridity /Sabine Broeck -- Postcolonial Desire: Mimicry,... more

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    Preliminary Material -- Hybridity Today /Joel Kuortti and Jopi Nyman -- Hybridity and Cultural Rights: Inventing Global Citizenship /David Huddart -- White Fatigue, or, Supplementary Notes on Hybridity /Sabine Broeck -- Postcolonial Desire: Mimicry, Hegemony, Hybridity /Dimple Godiwala -- As a Tupi-Indian, Playing the Lute: Hybridity as Anthropophagy /Jeroen Dewulf -- Strategic Hybridity: Some Pacific Takes on Postcolonial Theory /Paul Sharrad -- From Nostalgia to Postalgia: Hybridity and Its Discontents in the Work of Paul Gilroy and the Wachowski Brothers /Andrew Blake -- Hybrid Constructions: Native Autobiography and the Open Curves of Cultural Hybridity /Zoe Trodd -- The Necessity and Impossibility of Being Mixed-Race in Asian American Literature /Sheng-mei Ma -- The Hybridity of the Asian American Subject in Cynthia Kadohata’s The Floating World /Jopi Nyman -- Problematic Hybrid Identity in the Diasporic Writings of Jhumpa Lahiri /Joel Kuortti -- The Hybrid State: Hanif Kureishi and Thatcher’s Britain /Andrew Hammond -- Performing British Hybridity: Fix Up and Fragile Land /Valerie Kaneko Lucas -- Subaltern Envy? Salman Rushdie’s The Moor’s Last Sigh /Samir Dayal -- Postethnicity and Postcommunism in Hanif Kureishi’s Gabriel’s Gift and Salman Rushdie’s Fury /Mita Banerjee -- Index. This interdisciplinary collection of critical articles seeks to reassess the concept of hybridity and its relevance to post-colonial theory and literature. The challenging articles written by internationally acclaimed scholars discuss the usefulness of the term in relation to such questions as citizenship, whiteness studies and transnational identity politics. In addition to developing theories of hybridity, the articles in this volume deal with the role of hybridity in a variety of literary and cultural phenomena in geographical settings ranging from the Pacific to native North America. The collection pays particular attention to questions of hybridity, migrancy and diaspora

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9789401203890
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    Series: Textxet. Studies in Comparative Literature, 51
    Subjects: Cultural fusion in literature; Postcolonialism in literature; Cultural fusion in literature; Postcolonialism in literature
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (341 pages)
  23. The splintered glass
    facets of trauma in the post-colony and beyond
    Published: 2011
    Publisher:  Rodopi, Amsterdam

    Preliminary Material -- Broken Memories of a Traumatic Past and the Redemptive Power of Narrative in the Fiction of Edwidge Danticat /Aitor Ibarrola–Armendáriz -- “When the World is Free”: Traumatized Soldiers in Patricia Grace’s Second World War... more

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    Preliminary Material -- Broken Memories of a Traumatic Past and the Redemptive Power of Narrative in the Fiction of Edwidge Danticat /Aitor Ibarrola–Armendáriz -- “When the World is Free”: Traumatized Soldiers in Patricia Grace’s Second World War Novel Tu /Donna Coates -- Passion to Pasyon: Playing Militarism /Merlinda Bobis -- Poetics of Dislocation: Trauma, Language, Memory /Meena Alexander -- Trauma, Madness, and the Ethics of Narration in J.M. Coetzee’s In the Heart of the Country /Susana Onega -- “Softer than Cotton, Stronger than Steel”: Metaphor and Trauma in Shani Mootoo’s Cereus Blooms at Night /Maite Escudero -- Haunting Wounds: Genital Alterations, Autobiography, and Trauma /Chantal Zabus -- Personal Trauma/Historical Trauma in Tim Winton’s Dirt Music /Bárbara Arizti -- “Twisted Ghosts”: Settler Envy and Historical Resolution in Andrew McGahan’s The White Earth /Marc Delrez -- The Trauma of Immigration and the Ethics of Self-Positioning in Richard Flanagan’s The Sound of One Hand Clapping /Heinz Antor -- Inside Out in the Land Down Under: Reading Trauma through Janette Turner Hospital’s Oyster /Isabel Fraile -- Notes on Contributors -- Index. These essays discuss trauma studies as refracted through literature, focusing on the many ways in which the terms ‘cultural trauma’ and ‘personal trauma’ intertwine in postcolonial fiction. In a catastrophic age such as the present, trauma itself may serve to provide linkage through cross-cultural understanding and new forms of community. Western colonization needs to be theorized in terms of the infliction of collective trauma, and the postcolonial process is itself a post-traumatic cultural formation and condition. Moreover, the West’s claim on trauma studies (via the Holocaust) needs to be put in a perspective recuperating other, non-Western experiences. Geo-historical areas covered include Africa (genital alteration) and, more specifically, South Africa (apartheid), the Caribbean (racial and gendered violence in Trinidad; the trauma of Haiti), and Asia (total war in the Philippines; ethnic violence in India compared to 9/11). Special attention is devoted to Australia (Aboriginal and multicultural aspects of traumatic experience) and New Zealand (the Maori Battalion). Writers treated include J.M. Coetzee, Shani Mootoo, Edwidge Danticat, Richard Flanagan, Janette Turner Hospital, Andrew McGahan, Tim Winton, and Patricia Grace. Illuminating insights are provided by creative writers (Merlinda Bobis and Meena Alexander). Contributors: Meena Alexander, Heinz Antor, Bárbara Arizti, Merlinda Bobis, Donna Coates, Marc Delrez, Maite Escudero, Isabel Fraile, Aitor Ibarrola-Armendáriz, Susana Onega, Chantal Zabus

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9789401200837
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    Series: Cross/cultures ; 136
    Subjects: English literature; Australian literature; New Zealand literature; Postcolonialism in literature; Psychic trauma in literature; Wounds and injuries in literature; Australian literature; English literature; New Zealand literature; Postcolonialism in literature; Psychic trauma in literature; Wounds and injuries in literature; Criticism, interpretation, etc
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (xxvi, 262 pages)
    Notes:

    Includes bibliographical references and index

  24. Projections of paradise
    ideal elsewheres in postcolonial migrant literature
    Published: 2011
    Publisher:  Rodopi, Amsterdam

    Preliminary Material -- Revisiting Lost Gardens: The Expulsion from Childhood in the Writings of Penelope Lively /Vera Alexander -- Kashmir by Way of London and New York: Projections of Paradise in Salman Rushdie and Agha Shahid Ali /Geetha... more

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    Preliminary Material -- Revisiting Lost Gardens: The Expulsion from Childhood in the Writings of Penelope Lively /Vera Alexander -- Kashmir by Way of London and New York: Projections of Paradise in Salman Rushdie and Agha Shahid Ali /Geetha Ganapathy–Doré -- Subverting the Tropical Paradise /Gerd Bayer -- The Search for Paradise: Amitav Ghosh’s The Hungry Tide /Evelyne Hanquart–Turner -- “But are we not all refugees from something?”: Projections of Paradise in Romesh Gunesekera’s Reef /Susanne Pichler -- Reconfigurations of “home as a mythic place of desire”: Bernardine Evaristo’s Soul Tourists /Petra Tournay–Theodotou -- The Paradise Within: Displacement, Memory and Nostalgia in Abdulrazak Gurnah’s By the Sea /Sofía Muñoz Valdivieso -- Paradise Regained?: The Harem in Fatima Mernissi’s Dreams of Trespass: Tales of a Harem Girlhood /Marta Mamet–Michalkiewicz -- The Scent of Paradise: Michael Ondaatje’s “The Cinnamon Peeler” /Ulla Ratheiser -- Waters of Paradise: The English Patient /Ursula Kluwick -- “I got raptures once, and I saw God”: Shabine as Prophetic Shaman of Paradise in Derek Walcott’s “The Schooner Flight” /Derek Coyle -- “I feel the land”: Contradictions of Place in Rudy Wiebe’s Mennonite Novels /Janne Korkka -- Glimpses of Paradise: Hope in Short Stories of Migration by M.G. Vassanji, Cyril Dabydeen, and Janette Turner Hospital /Helga Ramsey–Kurz -- Notes on Contributors -- Index. Paradise is commonly imagined as a place of departure or arrival, beginning and closure, permanent inhabitation of which, however much desired, is illusory. This makes it the dream of the traveller, the explorer, the migrant – hence, a trope recurrent in postcolonial writing, which is so centrally concerned with questions of displacement and belonging. Projections of Paradise documents this concern and demonstrates the indebtedness of writers as diverse as Salman Rushdie, Agha Shahid Ali, Cyril Dabydeen, Bernardine Evaristo, Amitav Ghosh, James Goonewardene, Romesh Gunesekera, Abdulrazak Gurnah, Janette Turner Hospital, Penelope Lively, Fatima Mernissi, Michael Ondaatje, Shyam Selvadurai, M.G. Vassanji, and Rudy Wiebe to strikingly similar myths of fulfilment. In writing, directly or indirectly, about the experience of migration, all project paradises as places of origin or destination, as homes left or not yet found, as objects of nostalgic recollection or hopeful anticipation. Yet in locating such places, quite specifically, in Egypt, Zanzibar, Kashmir, Sri Lanka, the Sundarbans, Canada, the Caribbean, Queensland, Morocco, Tuscany, Russia, the Arctic, the USA, and England, they also subvert received fantasies of paradise as a pleasurable land rich with natural beauty. Projections of Paradise explores what happens to these fantasies and what remains of them as postcolonial writings call them into question and expose the often hellish realities from which popular dreams of ideal elsewheres are commonly meant to provide an escape. Contributors: Vera Alexander, Gerd Bayer, Derek Coyle, Geetha Ganapathy-Doré, Evelyne Hanquart-Turner, Ursula Kluwick, Janne Korkka, Marta Mamet-Michalkiewicz, Sofia Muñoz-Valdieso, Susanne Pichler, Helga Ramsey-Kurz, Ulla Ratheiser, Petra Tournay-Thedotou

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9789401200332
    Other identifier:
    Series: Array ; 132
    Subjects: Paradise in literature; Postcolonialism in literature; Emigration and immigration in literature; Emigration and immigration in literature; Paradise in literature; Postcolonialism in literature
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (xxv, 277 pages)
    Notes:

    Includes bibliographical references and index

  25. Labyrinths, intellectuals and the revolution
    the Arabic-language Moroccan novel, 1957-72
    Published: 2013
    Publisher:  Brill, Leiden

    Preliminary Material -- Introduction -- 1 Conditions and Preconditions of the Arabic-Language Moroccan Novel -- 2 The Labyrinthine and the Abstract -- 3 Permeability and the Sacred Interior -- 4 The Intellectual Master Narrator -- 5 The Female... more

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    Preliminary Material -- Introduction -- 1 Conditions and Preconditions of the Arabic-Language Moroccan Novel -- 2 The Labyrinthine and the Abstract -- 3 Permeability and the Sacred Interior -- 4 The Intellectual Master Narrator -- 5 The Female Protagonist in the Labyrinth -- 6 Exile and Trauma -- 7 Retrospectives on Revolution -- 8 Labyrinthine Narratives and Peripheral Intellectuals -- Conclusion -- Novels Examined in This Study -- Bibliography -- Index. Labyrinths, Intellectuals and the Revolution traces the development of the postcolonial Arabic-language Moroccan novel from its roots in travel narratives and autobiography into its more mature period of stylistic and thematic diversity in the early 1970s. This study first undertakes an exploration of the political, social and artistic conditions under which the genre developed, then moves to close readings of each of the formative texts, grouped by theme. The analysis of these texts centers around their spatial practices: there is a tension between the labyrinthine space of the street, which deflects legibility, and the sacred interior within the blank walls, wherein a certain equality of gaze and power can be perceived

     

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    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
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    ISBN: 9789004247697
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    Series: Studies in the history and society of the Maghrib ; v. 4
    Subjects: Arabic fiction; Space in literature; Intellectuals in literature; Revolutionaries in literature; Postcolonialism in literature; LITERARY CRITICISM / African
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (v, 246 pages)
    Notes:

    Includes bibliographical references and index