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Sounding The Break African American And Caribbean Routes Of World Literature Jason Frydman

  • SKU: BELL-36154034
Sounding The Break African American And Caribbean Routes Of World Literature Jason Frydman
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Sounding The Break African American And Caribbean Routes Of World Literature Jason Frydman instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Virginia Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 7.06 MB
Pages: 192
Author: Jason Frydman
ISBN: 9780813935720, 0813935725
Language: English
Year: 2014

Product desciption

Sounding The Break African American And Caribbean Routes Of World Literature Jason Frydman by Jason Frydman 9780813935720, 0813935725 instant download after payment.

The idea of "world literature" has served as a crucial though underappreciated interlocutor for African diasporic writers, informing their involvement in processes of circulation, translation, and revision that have been identified as the hallmarks of the contemporary era of world literature.

Yet in spite of their participation in world systems before and after European hegemony, Africa and the African diaspora have been excluded from the networks and archives of world literature.

In Sounding the Break, Jason Frydman attempts to redress this exclusion by drawing on historiography, ethnography, and archival sources to show how writers such as W. E. B. Du Bois, Zora Neale Hurston, Alejo Carpentier, Derek Walcott, Maryse Condé, and Toni Morrison have complicated both Eurocentric and Afrocentric categories of literary and cultural production. Through their engagement with and revision of the European world literature discourse, he contends, these writers conjure a deep history of "literary traffic" whose expressions are always already cosmopolitan, embedded in the long histories of cultural and economic exchange between Africa, Asia, and Europe. It is precisely the New World American location of these writers, Frydman concludes, that makes possible this revisionary perspective on the idea of (Old) World literature.

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