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Displaying results 1 to 5 of 5.

  1. Fictions of African Dictatorship
    Published: 2018
    Publisher:  Peter Lang Ltd, Oxford

    Fictions of African Dictatorship examines the fictional representation of the African dictator and the performance of dictatorship across genres. The volume includes contributions focusing on literature, theatre and film, all of which examine the... more

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    Bibliothek der Hochschule Darmstadt, Zentralbibliothek
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    Fictions of African Dictatorship examines the fictional representation of the African dictator and the performance of dictatorship across genres. The volume includes contributions focusing on literature, theatre and film, all of which examine the relationship between the fictional and the political. Among the questions the contributors ask: what are the implications of reading a novel for its historical content or accuracy? How does the dictator novel interrogate ideas of veracity? How is power performed and ridiculed? How do different writers reflect on questions of authority in the postcolony, and what are the effects on their stories and modes of narration? This volume untangles some of the intricate workings of dictatorial power in the postcolony, through twelve close readings of works of fiction. It interrogates the intersections between real and literary space, exploring censorship, political critique and creative resistance. Insights into a wide range of lesser known texts and contexts make this volume an original and insightful contribution to scholarship on representations of dictatorship.

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Contributor: Boehmer, Elleke; Tuck, Stephen; Makalani, Minkah; Daley, Patricia; Collis-Buthelezi, Victoria; Neveu Kringelbach, Hélène; Kamugisha, Aaron; Baker, Charlotte; Grayson, Hannah
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781787076822
    Other identifier:
    DDC Categories: 800
    Edition: 1st, New ed.
    Series: Race and Resistance Across Borders in the Long Twentieth Century ; 4
    Subjects: Literatur; Diktator <Motiv>
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource
  2. Writing the Prison in African Literature
    Published: 2019
    Publisher:  Peter Lang Ltd, Oxford ; Peter Lang International Academic Publishers, Bern

    This book examines a selection of prison memoirs by five renowned African writers: Ngugi wa Thiong’o, Ruth First, Wole Soyinka, Nawal El Saadawi and Jack Mapanje. Detained across the continent from the 1960s onward due to their writing and political... more

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    This book examines a selection of prison memoirs by five renowned African writers: Ngugi wa Thiong’o, Ruth First, Wole Soyinka, Nawal El Saadawi and Jack Mapanje. Detained across the continent from the 1960s onward due to their writing and political engagement, each writer’s memoir forms a crucial yet often overlooked part of their wider literary work. The author analyses the varied and unique narrative strategies used to portray the prison, formulating a theory of prison memoir as genre that reads the texts alongside postcolonial, trauma, life-writing and prison theory. The book also illustrates the importance of these memoirs in the telling of their historical moment, from apartheid South Africa to post-independence Kenya, Nigeria, Egypt and Malawi. «This is an outstanding study of African prison writing which makes a significant contribution to the study of life writing and twentieth-century African history alike. By focusing on key African writers and intellectuals, all of whom were incarcerated for their politics, Knighton explores in great detail how prison affects the mind, body and imagination, and how it strengthens rather than weakens the will to resist.»(Dr Christopher Warnes, Senior Lecturer in English, University of Cambridge)«Writing the Prison in African Literature is a glittering contribution to the field of African life writing. Countering the prejudice that autobiography is implicitly a Western form, the book demonstrates that the African prison memoir enables agile self-construction through a multi-layered structure and a mutable set of mechanics. Readers will find much to savour in Knighton’s astute and understated masterpiece.»(Dr Brendon Nicholls, Lecturer in African and Postcolonial Literatures, University of Leeds)...

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Contributor: Boehmer, Elleke; Makalani, Minkah; Tuck, Stephen; Daley, Patricia; Neveu Kringelbach, Hélène; Collis-Buthelezi, Victoria; Kamugisha, Aaron; Knighton, Rachel
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781788746489
    Other identifier:
    DDC Categories: 820
    Edition: 1st, New ed.
    Series: Race and Resistance Across Borders in the Long Twentieth Century ; 5
    Subjects: Englisch; Autobiografische Literatur; Gefängnis <Motiv>
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource
  3. Fighting Words
    Fifteen Books that Shaped the Postcolonial World
    Published: 2019
    Publisher:  Peter Lang Ltd, Oxford ; Peter Lang International Academic Publishers, Bern

    Can a book change the world? If books were integral to the creation of the imperial global order, what role have they played in resisting that order throughout the twentieth century? To what extent have theories and movements of anti-imperial and... more

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    Can a book change the world? If books were integral to the creation of the imperial global order, what role have they played in resisting that order throughout the twentieth century? To what extent have theories and movements of anti-imperial and anticolonial resistance across the planet been shaped by books as they are read across the world?This updated edition of Fighting Words responds to these questions by examining how the book as a cultural form has fuelled resistance to empire in the long twentieth century. Through fifteen case studies that bring together literary, historical and book historical perspectives, this collection explores the ways in which books have circulated anti-imperial ideas, as they themselves have circulated as objects and commodities within regional, national and transnational networks. What emerges is a complex portrait of the vital and multifaceted role played by the book in both the formation and the form of anticolonial resistance, and the development of the postcolonial world. «The volume remains an excellent source of inspiration for the classroom and for a form of academic research that builds on praxis and aims for social change.» (Claire Gallen, Commonwealth Essays and Studies, 41.1)«Importantly, the volume achieves the rare feat of both providing ample material for reflection and leaving its readers wanting to know more about the books examined within its pages. In this sense, Fighting Words is a most stimulating read; it should be of considerable interest to a large number of students and researchers in postcolonial studies.» (Darica Tunca, Recherche Littéraire, 35)...

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Contributor: Boehmer, Elleke; Collis-Buthelezi, Victoria; Daley, Patricia; Kamugisha, Aaron; Makalani, Minkah; Neveu Kringelbach, Hélène; Tuck, Stephen; Davies, Dominic; Lombard, Erica; Mountford, Benjamin
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781789974270
    Other identifier:
    RVK Categories: EC 1878
    DDC Categories: 800; 020
    Edition: 2nd, Revised ed.
    Series: Race and Resistance Across Borders in the Long Twentieth Century ; 1
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource
  4. Imperial Infrastructure and Spatial Resistance in Colonial Literature, 1880-1930
    Contributor: Roynon, Tessa (Publisher); Boehmer, Elleke (Publisher); Collis-Buthelezi, Victoria (Publisher); Daley, Patricia (Publisher); Kamugisha, Aaron (Publisher); Makalani, Minkah (Publisher); Neveu Kringelbach, Hélène (Publisher); Tuck, Stephen (Publisher)
    Published: 2017
    Publisher:  Peter Lang Ltd, International Academic Publishers, Oxford

    Universitätsbibliothek Erlangen-Nürnberg, Hauptbibliothek
    Unlimited inter-library loan, copies and loan
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    Volltext (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    Source: Union catalogues
    Contributor: Roynon, Tessa (Publisher); Boehmer, Elleke (Publisher); Collis-Buthelezi, Victoria (Publisher); Daley, Patricia (Publisher); Kamugisha, Aaron (Publisher); Makalani, Minkah (Publisher); Neveu Kringelbach, Hélène (Publisher); Tuck, Stephen (Publisher)
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781787074514
    Other identifier:
    9781787074514
    RVK Categories: HL 1136
    Edition: 1st, New ed
    Subjects: Infrastruktur <Motiv>; Englisch; Imperialismus <Motiv>; Kolonialliteratur; Kapitalismus <Motiv>
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (310 Seiten), 20 ill
    Notes:

    Online resource; title from title screen (viewed June 27, 2019)

    Between 1880 and 1930, the British Empire's vast infrastructural developments facilitated the incorporation of large parts of the globe into not only its imperial rule, but also the capitalist world-system. Throughout this period, colonial literary fiction, in recording this vast expansion, repeatedly cited these imperial infrastructures to make sense of the various colonial landscapes in which they were set. Physical embodiments of empire proliferate in this writing. Railways and trains, telegraph wires and telegrams, roads and bridges, steamships and shipping lines, canals and other forms of irrigation, cantonments, the colonial bungalow, and other kinds of colonial urban infrastructure - all of these infrastructural lines broke up the landscape and gave shape to the literary depiction and production of colonial space. By developing a methodology called «infrastructural reading», the author shows how a focus on the infrastructural networks that circulate through colonial fiction are almost always related to some form of anti-imperial resistance that manifests spatially within their literary, narrative and formal elements. This subversive reading strategy - which is applied in turn to writers as varied as H. Rider Haggard, Olive Schreiner and John Buchan in South Africa, and Flora Annie Steel, E.M. Forster and Edward Thompson in India - demonstrates that these mostly pro-imperial writings can reveal an array of ideological anxieties, limitations and silences as well as more direct objections to and acts of violent defiance against imperial control and capitalist accumulation

    «For Davies, infrastructure in colonial fiction persists as a reminder of the economic unevenness inherent within the project of imperialism. Drawing on a range of thinkers (J.A. Hobson, Rosa Luxemburg, Edward Soja, Edward Said, amongst others), he argues that the inequality produced by global imperial capital takes on a distinct, and contradictory, spatial form in the colonies: underdevelopment coexists with development in these spaces as the shanty town is never too far from the developed roads, bridges, railways.» «Davies insists that an infrastructural mode of reading offers the only true record of resistance - a claim grounded in his privileging of a materialist/economic lens. Taking this interplay between real and imagined geographies a step further, he argues that infrastructures in fiction directly shape and organize spaces outside.» «[T]his a theoretically enlightening book that broadens our conceptual understanding of the multiple materialist registers on which infrastructures operate in colonial fiction.» (Niyati Sharma, Journal of Postcolonial Writing, Vol. 54, Number 6 2019)

  5. Imperial Infrastructure and Spatial Resistance in Colonial Literature, 1880–1930
    Published: 2017
    Publisher:  Peter Lang Ltd, Oxford ; Peter Lang International Academic Publishers, Bern

    Between 1880 and 1930, the British Empire’s vast infrastructural developments facilitated the incorporation of large parts of the globe into not only its imperial rule, but also the capitalist world-system. Throughout this period, colonial literary... more

    Access:
    Universitätsbibliothek Gießen
    No inter-library loan

     

    Between 1880 and 1930, the British Empire’s vast infrastructural developments facilitated the incorporation of large parts of the globe into not only its imperial rule, but also the capitalist world-system. Throughout this period, colonial literary fiction, in recording this vast expansion, repeatedly cited these imperial infrastructures to make sense of the various colonial landscapes in which they were set. Physical embodiments of empire proliferate in this writing. Railways and trains, telegraph wires and telegrams, roads and bridges, steamships and shipping lines, canals and other forms of irrigation, cantonments, the colonial bungalow, and other kinds of colonial urban infrastructure – all of these infrastructural lines broke up the landscape and gave shape to the literary depiction and production of colonial space.By developing a methodology called «infrastructural reading», the author shows how a focus on the infrastructural networks that circulate through colonial fiction are almost always related to some form of anti-imperial resistance that manifests spatially within their literary, narrative and formal elements. This subversive reading strategy – which is applied in turn to writers as varied as H. Rider Haggard, Olive Schreiner and John Buchan in South Africa, and Flora Annie Steel, E.M. Forster and Edward Thompson in India – demonstrates that these mostly pro-imperial writings can reveal an array of ideological anxieties, limitations and silences as well as more direct objections to and acts of violent defiance against imperial control and capitalist accumulation. «For Davies, infrastructure in colonial fiction persists as a reminder of the economic unevenness inherent within the project of imperialism. Drawing on a range of thinkers (J.A. Hobson, Rosa Luxemburg, Edward Soja, Edward Said, amongst others), he argues that the inequality produced by global imperial capital takes on a distinct, and contradictory, spatial form in the colonies: underdevelopment coexists with development in these spaces as the shanty town is never too far from the developed roads, bridges, railways.»«Davies insists that an infrastructural mode of reading offers the only true record of resistance – a claim grounded in his privileging of a materialist/economic lens. Taking this interplay between real and imagined geographies a step further, he argues that infrastructures in fiction directly shape and organize spaces outside.»«[T]his a theoretically enlightening book that broadens our conceptual understanding of the multiple materialist registers on which infrastructures operate in colonial fiction.»(Niyati Sharma, Journal of Postcolonial Writing, Vol. 54, Number 6 2019)...

     

    Export to reference management software   RIS file
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    Source: Union catalogues
    Contributor: Boehmer, Elleke; Collis-Buthelezi, Victoria; Daley, Patricia; Kamugisha, Aaron; Makalani, Minkah; Neveu Kringelbach, Hélène; Tuck, Stephen; Davies, Dominic
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781787074514
    Other identifier:
    RVK Categories: HL 1101
    DDC Categories: 820
    Edition: 1st, New ed.
    Series: Race and Resistance Across Borders in the Long Twentieth Century ; 2
    Subjects: Englisch; Kolonialliteratur; Imperialismus <Motiv>; Infrastruktur <Motiv>; Kapitalismus <Motiv>
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource