ABSTRACT

This volume defines versions of the transnational in their historical and cultural specificity. By "locating," the contributors contextualize historical and contemporary understandings of the fluid term "transnational," which vary in relation to the disciplines involved. This kind of historical and geographical "locating" implicitly turns against forms of contemporary transnational euphoria which, inspired by poststructural models of all-encompassing semiospheres, on the one hand, and by visions of the utopian communicative potential of new media like the internet, on the other, see national and ethnic paradigms as easily superseded by transnational agendas. By differentiating between various forms of transnational ideals and ideas in historical and geographical perspective since the Renaissance, the contributors aim to rediscover distinctions -- for instance between transnationalisms and cosmopolitanisms -- which neo-liberal transnational euphoria has tended to erase.

part |85 pages

Defining the Transnational and the Cosmopolitan

part |75 pages

Historicizing the Transnational and the Cosmopolitan

part |92 pages

Redefining Transnationalism(s) vs. International Commodification

chapter |16 pages

Remembering Africa

Africa as the Sign of the Transnational in Black-British Writing 1

chapter |15 pages

The Great Game

The Geopolitics of Secret Knowledge

chapter |11 pages

The Border as Third Space

Between Colonial Gaze and Transnational Dislocation

chapter |21 pages

Cracked Communicating Vessels

Sexuality, Body Modification, and Flesh in the West and the ‘non-West'

chapter |16 pages

Globalizing Jane Austen

An Analysis of Gurinder Chadha's Pride and Prejudice Adaptation Bride and Prejudice