
eBook - PDF
Literary Connections Between South Africa and the Lusophone World
- 169 pages
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - PDF
Literary Connections Between South Africa and the Lusophone World
About this book
Literary Connections between South Africa and the Lusophone World connects literatures and cultures of South Africa and the Portuguese-speaking nations of Africa and beyond, and is set within literary and cultural studies. The chapters gathered in this volume reinforce the critical and ongoing conversations in comparative and world literature from perspectives of the South. It outlines some possible theoretical and methodological starting points for a comparative framework that targets, transnationally, literatures from the South. This volume is an additional step to renew the critical potentialities of comparative literary studies (Spivak 2009) as well as of humanistic criticism itself (Said 2004) as South Africa and the Lusophone world (except its former colonizer, Portugal) are outside the spatial and cultural dimension usually defined as European and/or North American. In this sense and due to the evident geographical and socio-historical links between these regions, critical scholarship on their literary connections can contribute to unprecedented perspectives of representational practices within a broader contextual dimension, and in so doing, provides the emergence of what Boaventura de Sousa Santos called "epistemologies of the South" (Santos 2016), as it considers cultural exchanges in the space of so-called "overlapping territories" and "intertwined histories" (Said 1993).
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Yes, you can access Literary Connections Between South Africa and the Lusophone World by Anita De Melo,Ludmylla Lima,John T. Maddox IV in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & African Literary Criticism. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Revisiting the Adamastor Myth in Fernando Pessoa’s “O Mostrengo” and André Brink’s The First Life
- A Thread of Gold
- Van der Post’s Postcolonial Melancholia and Zimler’s Reparational Mourning in Novels on the San
- Ruy Duarte de Carvalho’s Border Literature in As paisagens propícias
- “Why Do They Kill Us?”
- Last Dinner at Polana
- The Degrading Figuration of the Intellectual on the Periphery of Capitalism
- Dissident Authorship in Post-colonial Mozambique and Postapartheid South Africa
- Narrating the World from Africa
- Afterword
- Index
- About the Editors
- About the Contributors