ABSTRACT

Prompted by centuries of warfare, political oppression, natural disasters, and economic collapses, exile has had an enormous impact not only on individuals who have undergone transplantation from one culture to another but also on the host societies they have joined and those worlds they have left behind. Written by prominent literary critics, creative authors, and artists, the essays gathered within Exile in Global Literature and Culture: Homes Found and Lost meditate upon the painful journeys—geographic, spiritual, emotional, psychological—brought about due to exilic rupture, loss, and dislocation. Yet exile also fosters potential pleasures and rewards: to extend scholar Martin Tucker’s formulation, wherever the exile might land in flight, he bears with him the sweetness of survival, the triumph of transcendence, the luxury of liminality, and the invitation to innovate and invent in new lands. Indeed, exile embodies both blessing and curse, homes found and lost. Furthermore, this book adheres to (and tests) the premise that exile‘s deepest and innermost currents are manifested through writing and other artistic forms.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

The Overreaching Arc of Exile

chapter 3|18 pages

“I Am Not What I Am”

Considerations of Shakespearean Exile

chapter 5|11 pages

José Martí

Just Another Face in the Crowd

chapter 6|11 pages

Exile as Metaphor and Memory

The Case of Salman Rushdie

chapter 7|14 pages

The Reluctant Exile

Remembering the Exilic Legacy of the Hungarian Jewish Poet, Miklós Radnóti

chapter 8|15 pages

Elie Wiesel

Writer as Witness to and in Exile

chapter 9|12 pages

Exiled from the Mother Tongue

Russian Writers Abroad

chapter 10|16 pages

The Exiled Language

chapter 11|9 pages

Dreamers and Lifers

Exile Terminable and Interminable

chapter 12|15 pages

Of Poetry, Place, and Personhood

Or the Exacting Resonances of Language

chapter 14|16 pages

On the State of Exile Studies

Past, Present, and Future

chapter 15|10 pages

Traveling With My Selves

chapter 16|11 pages

Mirages of Imaginary Exile

chapter 17|9 pages

The Literature of Exile

Reading and Teaching

chapter 18|24 pages

An Interview With Cuban-American Artist, Humberto Calzada

Exile, Nostalgia, and the Art of Memory