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Drawing on a Marxist concept of world literature, this book is a study of the manipulations of time in contemporary anglophone fiction from Africa and South Asia. Through critical work and literary reading, this research explores the times other than the present that seem to haunt an era of capitalist globalisation: nostalgic feelings about bygone ideals of identity and community, appeals to Golden Ages, returns of the repressed and anxious anticipations of global extinction and catastrophe. The term non-synchronism explored in this book captures these dislocations of the present, while offering a critical lens to grasp the politics of time of an era marked by the continuing expansion of capitalist modernity. Most importantly, non-synchronism is a dialectical paradigm charged with antagonistic political valences. The literary analysis presented in the volume hence connects the literary manipulation of time to discourses on extinction, accumulation, nostalgia, modernity and survival in global politics and literature.
Offers a sustained analysis of non-synchronism, an essential critical term for grasping world-literature's politics of time Explores the interplay between world literature, politics, history, and theory in a range of contemporary texts Introduces the reader to critical tools for examining the experience of time in an era of global capitalism
Auteur
Filippo Menozzi (PhD, Kent) is Lecturer in postcolonial and world literature at Liverpool John Moores University, UK. He is the author of Postcolonial Custodianship: Cultural and Literary Inheritance (2014), and his work has appeared in journals such as New Formations and Historical Materialism. In 2019, he was awarded a Teaching Excellence Award.
Résumé
"The book opens some enticing doors, and readers will be able to extend Menozzi's discussion into areas he has chosen ... . The book thus develops significant insights into the importance of world literature for understanding how diverse experiences of time reveal the power and limits of global capitalism." (Paul Huebener, ariel - A Review of International English Literature, Vol. 53 (1-2), 2022)
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