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Locating Postcolonial Narrative Genres
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Locating Postcolonial Narrative Genres book
Locating Postcolonial Narrative Genres
DOI link for Locating Postcolonial Narrative Genres
Locating Postcolonial Narrative Genres book
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ABSTRACT
This volume explores how postcolonial texts have determined the evolution or emergence of specific formal innovations in narrative genres. While the prominence of questions of cultural identity in postcolonial studies has prevented due attention to concerns of literary form and aesthetics, this book gives premium to the literary, aiming to delineate the evolution of specific narrative techniques as part of an emerging postcolonial aesthetics. Essays delineate elements of an emergent postcolonial narratology across a variety of seminal generic forms, such as the epic, the novel, the short story, the autobiography, and the folk tale, focusing on genre as a powerful tool for the historicizing of literature and orature within cultural discourses. Investigating the heuristic value of concepts such as mimicry, writing back, translation, negotiation, or subversion, the book considers the value of explanatory paradigms for postcolonial generic models. It also explores the status of postcolonial comparative aesthetics versus globalization studies and liberal concepts of the transnational, taking issue with the prominence of Western concepts of identity in discussions of postcolonial literature and the favoring of mimetic forms. This volume offers a unique contribution to the study of narrative genre in postcolonial literatures and provides valuable insight into the field of postcolonial studies on the whole.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |10 pages
Introduction: Towards a Postcolonial Narrative Aesthetics
part |2 pages
Part I Pre- and Post-colonial Aesthetic Templates
chapter 1|14 pages
Love, Marriage, and Realism: The Novel in Pre- and Post-colonial India
chapter 3|15 pages
“. . . At the Edge of Writing and Speech”: Shifting Genre, Relocating the Aesthetic
part |2 pages
Part II Resistant and Subversive Genres
chapter 4|15 pages
“Writing the Poetry of Troy”: Mahmoud Darwish and the Lyrical Epic as Postcolonial Resistance Genre
chapter 5|16 pages
Genre: Fidelity and Transgression in the Post-colonial African Novel
chapter 6|16 pages
“De-Formed Narrators”: Postcolonial Genre and Peripheral Modernity in Mabanckou and Pepetela
chapter |17 pages
7V.S. Naipaul’s Heterobiographical Fictions or Postcolonial Melancholia Reinterpreted
part |2 pages
Part III Longue Durée Perspectives and Orature
chapter 10|14 pages
. . . What Will Count as the World: Indian Short Story Cycles and the Question of Genre
part |2 pages
Part IV Emerging Narrative Genres