ABSTRACT

Examining a range of contemporary Anglophone texts, this book opens up postcolonial and transcultural studies for discussions of visuality and vision. It argues that the preoccupation with visual practices in Anglophone literatures addresses the power of images, vision and visual aesthetics to regulate cultural visibility and modes of identification in an unevenly structured world. The representation of visual practices in the imaginative realm of fiction opens up a zone in which established orders of the sayable and visible may be revised and transformed. In 12 chapters, the book examines narrative fiction by writers such as Michael Ondaatje, Derek Walcott, Salman Rushdie, David Dabydeen and NoViolet Bulawayo, who employ word-image relations to explore the historically fraught links between visual practices and the experience of modernity in a transcultural context. Against this conceptual background, the examination of verbal-visual relations will illustrate how Anglophone fiction models alternative modes of re-presentation that reflect critically on hegemonic visual regimes and reach out for new, more pluralized forms of exchange.

chapter 1|12 pages

Introduction

The Art and Power of Seeing in Postcolonial Contexts

chapter 2|21 pages

Intermedial Aesthetics in Postcolonial and Transcultural Contexts

Contests, Contact Zones and Translations

chapter 3|26 pages

Visuality and the Ethics of Seeing

Michael Ondaatje’s The English Patient

chapter 6|24 pages

Derek Walcott’s “Twin Heads”

Postcolonial Ekphrasis and Double Visions in Tiepolo’s Hound

chapter 7|17 pages

Serial Intermediality

Jamaica Kincaid’s Lucy and See Now Then

chapter 8|20 pages

Monstrous Alterity

The Intermedial Aesthetics of Anne Carson’s Autobiography of Red

chapter 9|16 pages

‘African’ and ‘American’ Ekphrases

NoViolet Bulawayo’s We Need New Names

chapter 11|39 pages

Words and Images in Media Cultures

Teju Cole’s Every Day Is for the Thief and Open City

chapter 12|6 pages

Conclusion