Decolonisations of Literature: Critical Practice in Africa and Brazil after 1945 (Postcolonialism Across the Disciplines, #26)

by Stefan Helgesson

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Book cover for Decolonisations of Literature

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An Open Access edition of this book is available on the Liverpool University Press website and the OAPEN library.

This book sets out to understand how the meaning of 'literature' was transformed in the Global South in the post-1945 era. It looks at institutional contexts in South Africa (mainly Johannesburg), Brazil (Sao Paulo), Senegal (Dakar) and Kenya (Nairobi), and engages with critical writing in English, Portuguese and French. Critics studied in the book include Antonio Candido, Tim Couzens, Isabel Hofmeyr, Es'kia Mphahlele, Leopold Senghor, Taban Lo Liyong and Ngugi wa Thiong'o. By reading these intellectuals of the Global South as producers of theory and practice in their own right, the book attempts to demonstrate the contingency of what is her called the worlding of the concept of literature. 'Decolonisation' itself is seen as a contingent, non-linear process that unfolds in a recursive dialogue with the past. In a bid to offer a more grounded approach to world literature, a key objective of this study is therefore to investigate the accumulation of temporalities in institutional histories of critical practice. To reach this objective, it engages the method of conceptual history as developed by Reinhart Koselleck and David Scott, demonstrating how the concept of 'literature' is resemanticised in ways that dialectically both challenge and consolidate literature as a concept and practice in post-colonised societies.
  • ISBN13 9781802070095
  • Publish Date 1 May 2022 (first published 15 April 2022)
  • Publish Status Active
  • Publish Country GB
  • Imprint Liverpool University Press
  • Format Hardcover
  • Pages 208
  • Language English