The Postcolonial NovelThe Postcolonial Novel provides a concise and invaluable introduction to the rise of postcolonial literatures in English through close readings of seminal novels. These novels which continue to generate debate long after publication and have influenced the ways in which we think about literature and literary studies provide an ideal entry point to the subject for students. Each main chapter begins with a helpful introductory overview, and then closely reads a key novel before moving on to examine the impact and significance of that particular text. The book as a whole works to introduce and explain the emergence of theoretical discourse from these close readings, drawing extensively upon leading indigenous and western critics and theorists. Students will be encouraged to use this book to debate a wide range of critical issues that have been generated by postcolonial literatures. Richard J. Lane is Professor of English, Malaspina University-College, Canada |
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Contenido
1 Introducing the Postcolonial Novel in English | 1 |
2 The CounterCanonical Novel | 18 |
3 Alternative Historiographies | 32 |
4 National Consciousness | 47 |
5 Interrogating Subjectivity | 59 |
6 Recoding Narrative | 71 |
7 The Rushdie Affair | 83 |
8 The Optical Unconscious | 97 |
Conclusion | 109 |
Notes | 115 |
133 | |
144 | |
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Términos y frases comunes
Achebe's aesthetic African Literatures argues Ayemenem Bessie Head's British Canadian canonical chapter character Chinua Achebe colonial colonialist Commonwealth complex contemporary counter-discursive critical critique Cruso cultural debates discourse dream Elizabeth English Estha example explored Fanon feminist fiction Frantz Fanon Friday gender Gikandi Grain of Wheat Head's A Question Heart of Darkness hybridity Ibid identity Igbo impact indigenous interpretive intertextual Islamic Jane Eyre kathakali Kihika language literary London manifesto Margaret Atwood Margaret Atwood's Surfacing mode Mugo Mugo's Mumbi narrative narrator narrator's Ngugi Ngugi Wa Thiong'o notion Obasan Okonkwo Palace perspective political postcolonial literatures postcolonial novel postcolonial theory postmodern protagonist Quayson Question of Power reader reading realism relation relationship representation Research in African reveals Rushdie Affair Rushdie's Salman Satanic Verses Small Things story structure Susan Thieme Things Fall tion University Press unreliable unreliable narrator vision western Wide Sargasso Sea words writing back