Postcolonial Archipelagos
Essays on Hispanic Caribbean and Lusophone African Fiction
Series:
Kristian Van Haesendonck
Writers from different postcolonial regions are usually classified according to their different nationalities or linguistic areas, and have rarely been brought together in one volume. Moving in a new direction, Postcolonial Archipelagos crosses not only geographical but also linguistic boundaries, by focusing on two contexts which seemingly have little or nothing in common with one another: the Hispanic Caribbean, and Lusophone Africa. Kristian Van Haesendonck thus opens new ground, in two ways: first, by making connections between contemporary Caribbean and African writers, moving beyond the topos of slavery and negritude in order to analyse the (im)possibility of conviviality in postcolonial cultures; and secondly, by exploring new ways of approaching these literatures as postcolonial archipelagic configurations with historical links to their respective metropoles, yet also as elements of what Glissant and Hannerz have respectively called "Tout-Monde" and a "world in creolization". Although the focus is on writers from Lusophone Africa (Mia Couto, José Luis Mendonça and Guilherme Mendes da Silva) and the Hispanic Caribbean (Junot Díaz, Eduardo Lalo, Marta Aponte, James Stevens-Arce and Edgardo Rodríguez Juliá), connections are made with and within the broader global context of intensified globalization.
Index of Names
Extract
A
Agamben, Giorgio 128, 136, 159, 208, 209, 215, 365
Agualusa, José Eduardo 49, 331, 365
Andersen, Benedict 142, 355, 365
Antoni, Robert 146-149, 365
Aponte, Marta 21, 160, 162, 163, 327, 357
Arenas, Fernando 33, 45, 365
Arion, Frank Martinus 30, 31, 35, 49, 54, 229, 230, 240-242, 365, 387
Arlt, Roberto 20, 63, 64, 85, 365
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