1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910300013203321

Titolo

Literature, Memory, Hegemony : East/West Crossings / / edited by Sharmani Patricia Gabriel, Nicholas O. Pagan

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Singapore : , : Springer Singapore : , : Imprint : Palgrave Macmillan, , 2018

ISBN

981-10-9001-7

Edizione

[1st ed. 2018.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (XIX, 193 p. 3 illus.)

Disciplina

801

Soggetti

Literature—Philosophy

Culture

Oriental literature

Comparative literature

Motion pictures

Literary Theory

Global/International Culture

Asian Literature

Comparative Literature

Film Theory

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di contenuto

INTRODUCTION -- East/West: What’s at Stake? -- part i: COMPARATIVE AND CROSS-CULTURAL APPROACHES -- “Liu Hsieh and Mark Turner: The Elucidation of Literary Minds” -- “Crossing Frontiers: English Romanticism and Sufism as Literary Movements” -- PART II: Transnational orient(ations) and EMPIRES -- “‘The Democracy of Art’: Elizabeth Keith and the Aesthetic of the Eastern Ordinary” -- “From Victorian England to Colonial Korea: Desire and Subversion in Chan-wook Park’s Ah-ga-ssi (The Handmaiden)” -- PART iII: Immigration, “RACE”, AND Antinomies of NATION -- “Identity and Mis/Identification: The Asylum Seeker in Roma Tearne’s The Swimmer” -- “Korean/American Literary Images of Black Amerasians” -- part iV: TRANSLATING MEMORY and SUBALTERN HISTORy -- “Graphic Visions: Translating Chinese History through Collaborative Graphic



Autobiography” -- “Memory, Empathy, and Narrative in Meena Kandasamy’s The Gypsy Goddess” -- Conclusion -- “In Lieu of a Conclusion: East and West as Regions of Consciousness”.

Sommario/riassunto

This edited book considers the need for the continued dismantling of conceptual and cultural hegemonies of ‘East’ and ‘West’ in the humanities and social sciences. Cutting across a wide range of literature, film and art from different contexts and ages, this collection seeks out the interpenetrating dynamic between both terms. Highlighting the inherent instability of East and West as oppositional categories, it focuses on the ‘crossings’ between East and West and this nexus as a highly-charged arena of encounter and collision. Drawing from varied literary contexts ranging from Victorian literature to Chinese literature and modern European literature, the book covers a diverse range of subject matter, including material drawn from psychoanalytic and postcolonial theory and studies related to race, religion, diaspora, and gender, and investigates topical social and political issues —including terrorism, nationalism, citizenship, the refugee crisis, xenophobia and otherness. Offering a framework to consider the salient questions of cultural, ideological and geographical change in our societies, this book is a key read for those working within world literary studies.