ABSTRACT

Modern ideas of freedom and human rights have been repeatedly contested and are hotly debated at the beginning of the third millennium in response to new theories, needs, and challenges in contemporary life.

This volume offers culturally diverse contributions to the debate on freedom from the literatures and arts of the postcolonial world, exploring experiences that evoke, desire, imagine, and perform freedom across five continents and two centuries of history.

Experiences of Freedom opens with an introductory philosophical essay by Achille Mbembe and is divided into four sections that consider:

• resisting history and colonialism

• the right to move and to belong

• the right to (believe in) free futures

• imaginative freedom and critical engagement.

Each section contains a piece of creative writing directly connected to these topics from authors Chris Abani, Anita Desai, Caryl Phillips, and Alexis Wright, followed by a selection of critical essays.

Contributors: Chris Abani, Rochelle Almeida, Gil Anidjar, Jogamaya Bayer, Elena Bernardini, Anne Collett, Carmen Concilio, Paola Della Valle, Roberto Derobertis, Anita Desai, Lorna Down, Francesca Giommi, Gareth Griffiths, Dave Gunning, John C. Hawley, Peter H. Marsden, Russell McDougall, Achille Mbembe, Cinzia Mozzato, Kevin Newmark, Berndt Ostendorf, Mai Palmberg, Owen Percy, Kirsten Holst Petersen, Caryl Phillips, Annel Pieterse, Christiane Schlote, Nermeen Shaikh, Patrick Williams, Alexis Wright, and Robert J. C. Young.

chapter |19 pages

Fragile Freedom

part 1|82 pages

Resisting History and Colonialism

chapter 1|8 pages

Where to Point the Spears?

chapter 2|16 pages

The Right to Resist

chapter 3|12 pages

Blind Man's Buff in a Sandstorm?

Literary education in the late condominium Sudan

chapter 4|8 pages

“Saving Africa”

Narrative persistence, missions, development, and the “freeing” of sub-Saharan Africa

chapter 5|12 pages

Forms of Resistance

Writing from and about Uganda

chapter 6|12 pages

Whose Biafra?

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie's Half of a Yellow Sun

chapter 7|12 pages

“I am not a slave … I will be worthy of my native land”

Italian melodrama as resistance strategy in Witi Ihimaera's work

part 2|70 pages

The Right to Move and to Belong

chapter 8|5 pages

Coming to America—A Remix

chapter 9|10 pages

The Blood of Freedom

chapter 10|9 pages

Going away/Coming home

Searching for a fixed point in postcolonial Indian writing

chapter 12|12 pages

Anglo-Indian Migrants

Children of colonialism and the cultural geographies of encounter

chapter 13|13 pages

Everyday Border Surveillance and Trespassing

Cities in contemporary Indian art

chapter 14|9 pages

Negotiating Freedom on Scarred Bodies

Chris Abani's novellas

part 3|90 pages

The Right to (Believe in) Free Futures

chapter 15|5 pages

Rude Am I in My Speech

chapter 16|13 pages

Freedom of What Religion?

An archeology of American religious passions

chapter 17|14 pages

Sartre's “Morality and History”

Ethics for postcolonial times

chapter 19|11 pages

“Flying inna massa face”

Woman, nature, and sacred rites/rights in Marie-Elena John's Unburnable

chapter 21|11 pages

Good Again?

Imperialism and salvation in The Kite Runner and Caché

chapter 22|10 pages

“Holding All the Pieces Together”

Colonial legacies and postcolonial futures in the writings of Igiaba Scego and Cristina Ali Farah

part 4|78 pages

Imaginative Freedom and Critical Engagement

chapter 23|6 pages

Growing into Free Writing

chapter 24|13 pages

Generic Activism

Ahdaf Soueif's and Etel Adnan's art of creative non-fiction

chapter 25|11 pages

Dark Freedom

On J. M. Coetzee's Disgrace

chapter 26|9 pages

“I mike what i like”

Excesses of freedom in urban, post-apartheid South African poetry

chapter 27|12 pages

Tri-Freedom

The libretti of George Elliott Clarke

chapter 28|13 pages

A Poetics of Political Commitment

Robert Sullivan and human rights

chapter 29|12 pages

Writing Freedom

Nadine Gordimer and The New Yorker