• World Literature and Diaspora Studies

    Author(s):
    Jason Frydman (see profile)
    Date:
    2019
    Subject(s):
    Emigration and immigration, Ethnicity, Immigrants--Social conditions, Literature
    Item Type:
    Book chapter
    Tag(s):
    juan gelman, maryse condé, shani mootoo, shimon ballas, Diaspora studies, World literature
    Permanent URL:
    http://dx.doi.org/10.17613/12ta-p844
    Abstract:
    The idea of world literature emerged contemporaneously with innovative modes of conceptualizing the dynamics of world history, from the idealism of Hegel to the materialism of Marx and Engels. This affiliation has endured as the intellectual legacy of the nineteenth-century world-historical imagination, world-systems theory, gained traction in literary studies. The large-scale displacements and migrations produced by and productive of the modern world economic system have deeply imprinted global literary production: the African, Chinese, and Indian diasporas fueled by colonial political economy, for example, have attained an expansive and overlapping textual presence throughout Europe and Asia, Africa and the Americas. Both bearing witness to dispersal and fashioning its literary implications, ancient and modern diaspora formations cut across geopolitical as well as aesthetic categories. If in many ways it appears, though, that diaspora writing manifests the border-crossing promise foundational to the world literature idea, it just as reliably forges a counter-discourse challenging the temporal and spatial trajectories operative in Eurocentric theorizations of world literature and its history.
    Metadata:
    Published as:
    Book chapter    
    Status:
    Published
    Last Updated:
    4 years ago
    License:
    All Rights Reserved
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