1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910983490703321

Autore

Garrido Castellano Carlos

Titolo

Cultural Labour and Contemporary World Literatures in Portuguese / / edited by Carlos Garrido Castellano

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Cham : , : Springer Nature Switzerland : , : Imprint : Palgrave Macmillan, , 2025

ISBN

9783031672132

3031672135

Edizione

[1st ed. 2025.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (318 pages)

Collana

New Comparisons in World Literature, , 2634-6109

Disciplina

869.3009

Soggetti

Literature

European literature

Latin American literature

Labor

History

Comparative literature

Literature, Modern - 20th century

Literature, Modern - 21st century

World Literature

European Literature

Latin American/Caribbean Literature

Labor History

Comparative Literature

Contemporary Literature

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di contenuto

1. Introduction. Carlos Garrido Castellano and Ana Albuquerque -- 2. A Portuguese Nightmare: Resisting Neoliberalism and Neocolonialism in the Contemporary Portuguese Novel. Paulo de Medeiros -- 3. Hands Interweaving Words: José Saramago’s Creative Work as a Subversion of Neoliberalism. Daniela Maduro -- 4. “Desconseguir”: Narrative Dualities between Movement and Stillness in Kalaf Epalanga’s Também os Brancos Sabem Dançar. Ana Albuquerque -- 5. Cultural Labor and the



Angolan Historical Novel. Inocência Mata -- 6. And When Are You Going Back?! Narratives of Return and Identity Building in Diasporic Brazilian and Portuguese literatures. Liz Maria Teles de Sá Almeida -- 7. Lugar de Fala (Place of Speech) and the “New Voices” in 21st Century Brazilian Fiction. Karl Erik Schøllhammer -- 8. Brazilian Literature in Times of Political Setbacks. Regina Dalcastagnè -- 9. The Jaguar’s Story: Imagining Decoloniality in Micheliny Verunschk’s O som do rugido da onça. Leila Lehnen -- 10. The Author as Curator in Recent Brazilian Fiction. Luciene Azevedo -- 11. Barbarism without Civilization: Reading Mia Couto through a Latin American Lens. Kristian Van Haesendonck -- 12. Portuguese-speaking African Writers in the World-Literary Marketplace. Thomas Waller -- 13. Power, gender and sexuality in contemporary Cape Verde: On Evel Rocha’s Marginals. Mário César Lugarinho -- 14. Precarity Frontier: Cape Verdean Literature as World Literature. Emanuelle Santos -- 15. Cultural Labor and Historical Fiction in Contemporary Macau. Fernanda Gil Costa.

Sommario/riassunto

This book examines the evolution of contemporary narrative in Portuguese from the point of view of cultural labour. The main objective of this volume is to analyse the panorama of contemporary literary fiction in Portuguese under the prism of the economization of cultural creativity and the expansion of neoliberal understanding of creative subjectivity and self-realization. Assuming that neoliberalism still constitutes a haunting presence that becomes present in ways that are far from universal and homogeneous and that are shaped by coloniality, this book expands the debates on cultural labour and literary materialisms beyond European and North American contexts. Dealing with contemporary literary production from Brazil, Portugal, Angola, Mozambique, Cabo Verde, Macau, Canada and Goa, the volume also tries to reimagine issues of cultural labour and the expansion of artistic modes of self-definition from the point of view of contemporary literary production in Portuguese. Carlos Garrido Castellano is Senior Lecturer/Associate Professor in University College Cork, Ireland, where he coordinates a BA programme on Portuguese Studies. He is also Senior Associate Researched at the Visual Identities in Art and Design (VIAD), University of Johannesburg, South Africa. He is Principal Investigator of the IRC Laureate Consolidator Project “Assessing the Contemporary Art Novel in Spanish and Portuguese: Cultural Labour, Personal Identification and the Materialisation of Alternative Art Worlds (ARTFICTIONS) and the author of Beyond Representation in Contemporary Caribbean Art (2019), Art Activism for an Anticolonial Future (2021) and Literary Fictions of the Contemporary Art System (2023).