ABSTRACT

Using the aesthetic and political concerns of Parry’s oeuvre as a touchstone, this book explores new directions for postcolonial studies, Marxist literary criticism, and world literature in the contemporary moment, seeking to re-imagine the field, and alongside it, new possibilities for left critique. It is the first volume of essays focusing on the field-defining intellectual legacy of the literary scholar Benita Parry. As a leading critic of the post-structuralist turn within postcolonial studies, Parry has not only brought Marxism and postcolonial theory into a productive, albeit tense, dialogue, but has reinvigorated the field by bringing critical questions of resistance and struggle to bear on aesthetic forms. The book’s aim is two-fold: first, to evaluate Parry’s formative influence within postcolonial studies and its interface with Marxist literary criticism, and second, to explore new terrains of scholarship opened up by Parry’s work. It provides a critical overview of Parry’s key interventions, such as her contributions to colonial discourse theory; her debate with Spivak on subaltern consciousness and representation; her critique of post-apartheid reconciliation and neoliberalism in South Africa; her materialist critique of writers such as Kipling, Conrad, and Salih; her work on liberation theory, resistance, and radical agency; as well as more recent work on the aesthetics of "peripheral modernity." The volume contains cutting-edge work on peripheral aesthetics, the world-literary system, critiques of global capitalism and capitalist modernity, and the resurgence of Marxism, communism, and liberation theory by a range of established and new scholars who represent a dissident and new school of thought within postcolonial studies more generally. It concludes with the first-ever detailed interview with Benita Parry about her activism, political commitments, and her life and work as a scholar.

chapter |18 pages

Against the Grain

An Introduction to Benita Parry’s Intellectual Itinerary

part I|96 pages

Aesthetics

chapter 1|18 pages

Against Modernism

chapter 3|17 pages

“Broken Histories”

The Tribal and the Modern in Arun Joshi’s The Strange Case of Billy Biswas

chapter 4|18 pages

Peripheral Irrealisms

Water-Spirits, World-Ecology, and Neoliberalism

chapter 5|19 pages

“Not even a sci-fi writer”

Peripheral Genres, the World-System Novel, and Junot Díaz

part II|120 pages

Politics

chapter 7|24 pages

Disaffection, Sedition, and Resistance

Aurobindo Ghose and Revolutionary Thought

chapter 8|26 pages

Revolutionary Nationalism and Global Horizons

The Ghadar Party on Ireland and China

chapter 9|22 pages

The Limits of African Nationalism

From Anti-Apartheid Resistance to Postcolonial Critique

part III|43 pages

Interlocutions

chapter 11|24 pages

“It could be otherwise, it should be otherwise”

A Conversation with Benita Parry

chapter 12|3 pages

“Intellectual Life: A Duty to Dissent”

A Graduation Address Delivered at the University of York, 12 July 2016

chapter 13|11 pages

Benita Parry’s Position

An Address Delivered at the University of Warwick, 17 November 2001