'[I] wonder how we have managed without such a text.' –Rita Raley, UCSB, USA
Globalization has had a huge impact on thinking across the humanities, redefining the understanding of fields such as communication, culture, politics, and literature.
This groundbreaking Reader is the first to chart significant moments in the emergence of contemporary thinking about globalization and explore their significance for and impact on literary studies. The book's three sections look in turn at:
an overview of globalization theory and influential works in the field
the impact of globalization on literature and our understanding of the 'literary'
how issues in globalization can be used to read specific literary texts.
Containing essays by leading critics including Arjun Appadurai, Jacques Derrida, Simon Gikandi, Ursula K. Heise, Graham Huggan, Franco Moretti, Bruce Robbins and Anna Tsing, this volume outlines the relationship between globalization and literature, offering a key sourcebook for and introduction to an exciting, emerging field.
Literature and Globalization : A Reader
Description
Table of Contents
Introduction Section 1: Theorizing Globalization Editors’ Introduction 1. 'Time-space Compression and the Postmodern Condition’ - David Harvey 2. ‘The Globalising of Modernity’ - Anthony Giddens 3. ‘The Universalism–Particularism Issue’ - Roland Robertson 4. ‘Disjuncture and Difference’- Arjun Appadurai 5. ‘Querying Globalization’ - J.K Gibson-Graham 6. ‘The Global Situation’ - Anna Tsing 7. ‘Modernity as history: post-revolutionary China, globalization and the question of modernity’ - Arif Dirlik 8. ‘Free Trade and Culture’ - George Yúdice 9. ‘Performative Discourse and Social Form’- Angus Cameron and Ronen Palan, 10. ‘The Multitude Against Empire’ - Antonio Negri and Michael Hardt Section 2. Literature in the Discipline Editors’ Introduction 11. ‘Conjectures on World Literature’ - Franco Moretti 12. ‘Beyond Discipline? Globalization and the Future of English’ - Paul Jay 13. ‘Globalization and the Claims of Postcoloniality’ - Simon Gikandi 14. ‘Globalization, Peace, and Cosmopolitanism’ - Jacques Derrida 15. ‘Turn to the Planet: Literature, Diversity, and Totality’ - Masao Miyoshi 16. ‘"Untranslatable" Algeria: The Politics of Linguicide’- Emily Apter Section 3: Literary Readings Editors’ Introduction Environmentalism 17. ‘Deterritorialization and Eco-Cosmopolitanism’ - Ursula K. Heise 18. ‘"Greening" Postcolonialism: Ecocritical Perspectives’ - Graham Huggan 19. ‘Surfing the Second Wave: Amitav Ghosh’s The Hungry Tide’ - Pablo Mukerhjee Money and Markets 20. ‘Derrida’s Debt to Milton Friedman.’ - Michael Tratner 21. ‘Giving and Receiving: Nurudin Farah’s Gifts or the Postcolonial Logic of Third World Aid’ - Tim Woods 22. ‘Aesthetics of Globalization in Contemporary Fiction: The Function of the Fall of the Berlin Wall' - Padmaja Challakere Technology and Cyber-cultures 23. ‘eEmpires’ - Rita Raley 24. ‘Fear and Loathing in Globalization’ - Fredric Jameson 25. ‘Indians: the Globalized Woman on the Community Stage’ - Katrin Sieg Migration and Labour 26. ‘The Sweatshop Sublime’ - Bruce Robbins 27. ‘The Hungry Ghost: IMF Policy, Capitalist Transformation and Laboring Bodies in Southeast Asia’ - Joseph Medley and Lorrayne A Carrol 28. ‘East African Literature and the Politics of Global Reading’ - Peter J. Kalliney Worldliness and Cosmopolitanisms 29. ‘"We Are Not the World": Global Village, Universalism, and Karen Tei Yamashita’s Tropic of Orange’ - Sue-Im Lee 30. ‘An Elegy for African Cosmopolitanism: Phaswane Mpe’s Welcome to our Hillbrow’ - Neville Hoad 31. ‘Movements and Protests’ - Suman Gupta Bibliography
Author Description
The University of Winchester, UK University of Southampton, UK