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Zones of Instability: Literature, Postcolonialism, and the Nation
 
 
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Zones of Instability: Literature, Postcolonialism, and the Nation [Hardcover]

Imre Szeman (Author)

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Book Description

December 30, 2003 0801868033 978-0801868030

Attempts by writers and intellectuals in former colonies to create unique national cultures are often thwarted by a context of global modernity, which discourages particularity and uniqueness. In describing unstable social and political cultures, such "third-world intellectuals" often find themselves torn between the competing literary requirements of the "local" culture of the colony and the cosmopolitan, "world" culture introduced by Western civilization.

In Zones of Instability, Imre Szeman examines the complex relationship between literature and politics by exploring the production of nationalist literature in the former British empire. Taking as his case studies the regions of the British Caribbean, Nigeria, and Canada, Szeman analyzes the work of authors for whom the idea of the"nation" and literature are inexorably entwined, such as Chinua Achebe, Wole Soyinka, C.L.R. James, Frantz Fanon, and V.S. Naipaul. Szeman focuses on literature created in the two decades after World War II, decades in which the future prospects for many colonies went from extreme political optimism to extreme political disappointment. He finds that the "nation" can be read as that space in which literature is thought to be able to conjoin two things that history has separated—the writer and the people.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

Szeman speaks softly (and subtly), but as a leading-edge theorist of postcolonial literature and cultural studies he has earned the intellectual authority that underlies the present bold project.

(Choice 2004)

Szeman's framework defamiliarizes the platitudes and pieties we associate with the invocation of such names as Naipaul, James, and Achebe. This is a book that will stir debate in the best sense.

(Peter Hitchcock, City University of New York 2007)

Tightly written, boldly argued, and politically sophisticated, this is a major intervention in the study of postcolonial literature and globalization. Szeman retools the problem of the nation as it is usually understood in the study of national literatures, ripping out its Romantic 'soul' and replacing that with the much more concrete and workable concept of the zone. It's an exciting project with enormous consequences, and it should be widely read.

(Caren Irr, Brandeis University )

Offers an interesting and valuable argument.

(Chelva Kanaganayakam University of Toronto Quarterly )

About the Author

Imre Szeman is an associate professor of English at McMaster University.


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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
At the confluence of these quotations from the writer Jose Marti and the philosopher Paul Ricoeur it is possible to locate both the highest hopes for literature in the formerly colonized world, as well as the most serious challenge to the attainment of these hopes. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
West Indies, West Indian, World War, United States, The Middle Passage, British Caribbean, Fredric Jameson, East Timor, Making It Real, Benedict Anderson, Chinua Achebe, George Lamming, Black Skin, Anthills of the Savannah, British Empire, Imagined Communities, Frantz Fanon, Man of the People, Season of Anomy, White Masks, English Caribbean, Eric Williams, Frank Davey, Margaret Atwood, Massey Report
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