ABSTRACT

Poetics and Politics of Shame in Postcolonial Literature provides a new and wide-ranging appraisal of shame in colonial and postcolonial literature in English. Bringing together young and established voices in postcolonial studies, these essays tackle shame and racism, shame and agency, shame and ethical recognition, the problem of shamelessness, the shame of willed forgetfulness.  Linked by a common thread of reflections on shame and literary writing, the essays consider specifically whether the aesthetic and ethical capacities of literature enable a measure of stability or recuperation in the presence of shame’s destructive potential. The obscenity of the in-human, both in the colonial setting and in aftermaths that show little sign of abating, entails the acute significance of shame as a subject for continuing and urgent critical attention. 

chapter |42 pages

Introduction

Shame, Literature, and the Postcolonial

chapter 1|14 pages

Writing in, of, and around Shame

J.M. Coetzee’s Life & Times of Michael K

chapter 2|34 pages

Cursing the Fathers’ Curse

A Tragic Reading of White Shame in J.M. Coetzee’s In the Heart of the Country and Age of Iron

chapter 3|15 pages

Dictator Games

On Shame, Shitholes, and Beautiful Things

chapter 4|16 pages

“Unfinished Business”

Digging up the Past in Christine Piper’s After Darkness and Cory Taylor’s My Beautiful Enemy

chapter 8|17 pages

“Like solemn Afro-Greeks avid for grades”

Individual and Historical Shame in Walcott’s Earlier Poetry

chapter 10|15 pages

Afterword

A Swarm of Locusts Passed By