ABSTRACT

How does literature matter politically in the 21st century? This book offers an ecocritical framework for exploring the significance of literature today. Featuring a diverse body of texts and authors, it develops a future-oriented politics embedded in those transgressive realities which our political system finds impossible to tame. This book re-imagines political agency, voices, bodies and borders as transformative processes rather than rigid realities, articulating a ‘dia-topian’ literary politics. Taking a contextual approach, it addresses such urgent global issues as biopolitics, migration and borders, populism, climate change, and terrorism. These readings revitalize fictional worlds for political enquiry, demonstrating how imaginative literature seeds change in a world of closed-off horizons. Prior to the pragmatics of power-play, literary language breathes new energy into the frames of our thought and the shapes of our affects. This book shows how relation, metamorphosis and enmeshment can become salient in a politics beyond the conflict line.

chapter |17 pages

Introduction

Towards a Diatopian Politics of Literature

chapter 1|23 pages

Unmappable Gestures

Politics of Literature in the Age of Donald Trump

chapter 2|29 pages

Uncontainable Bodies

Posthuman Biopolitics

chapter 3|32 pages

Transversing the Event

Beyond the Trauma of Terrorism

chapter 4|36 pages

Emergence, Submergence, Insurgence

Politics on Liquid Ground

chapter 5|23 pages

Unravelling the Nation State

Openwork Lives in Migrant Graphic Narratives