ABSTRACT

Bhabha, in his preface, writes 'Nations, like narratives, lose their origins in the myths of time and only fully encounter their horizons in the mind's eye'.
From this seemingly impossibly metaphorical beginning, this volume confronts the realities of the concept of nationhood as it is lived and the profound ambivalence of language as it is written. From Gillian Beer's reading of Virginia Woolf, Rachel Bowlby's cultural history of Uncle Tom's Cabin and Francis Mulhern's study of Leaviste's 'English ethics'; to Doris Sommer's study of the 'magical realism' of Latin American fiction and Sneja Gunew's analysis of Australian writing, Nation and Narration is a celebration of the fact that English is no longer an English national consciousness, which is not nationalist, but is the only thing that will give us an international dimension.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

Narrating the nation

chapter |21 pages

Tribes within nations

The ancient Germans and the history of modern France

chapter |28 pages

Irresistible romance

The foundational fictions of Latin America

chapter |22 pages

Denaturalizing cultural nationalisms

Multicultural readings of ‘Australia’

chapter |20 pages

Destiny made manifest

The styles of Whitman's poetry

chapter |18 pages

Telescopic philanthropy

Professionalism and responsibility in Bleak House

chapter |19 pages

European pedigrees/African contagions

Nationality, narrative, and communality in Tutuola, Achebe, and Reed

chapter |15 pages

English reading

chapter |26 pages

The island and the aeroplane

The case of Virginia Woolf

chapter |32 pages

DissemiNation

Time, narrative, and the margins of the modem nation 1